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Brief Communications |
Department of Biological Sciences, Mount Holyoke College, 50 College Street, South Hadley, Massachusetts 01075 USA
Received for publication November 9, 2001. Accepted for publication January 29, 2002.
| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: dispersal establishment germination Reid's paradox Sarracenia purpurea Sarraceniaceae
| INTRODUCTION |
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Plants that occur in naturally isolated habitats present additional challenges for models of seed dispersal (Clark, 1998
; Higgins and Richardson, 1999
; Pakeman, 2001
). These models implicitly assume that long-distance dispersers can cross habitat boundaries unimpeded or that at least all habitat between the source population and the furthest colonizing site is suitable for establishment. For many habitats, this is not the case, as increasing urbanization and other landscape transformations render intervening habitat unsuitable either for establishment or for disperser stopovers.
In northeastern North America, Sphagnum bogs occur as isolated wetlands, usually surrounded by forests and fields. Even large expanses of bogs are being fragmented by peat mining and afforestation (Pellerin and Lavoie, 2000
). Many plants that grow in bogs are habitat specialists, yet they have broad geographic ranges. Colonization of these habitats had to have occurred by crossing large expanses of nonwetlands (forests, grasslands, etc.) in which wetland plants cannot survive. Thus, understanding dispersal and establishment dynamics of bog plants may provide additional insights into models for the migration dynamics of plants as our climate changes rapidly. In this paper, we describe the dispersal and seedling establishment of the northern pitcher plant, Sarracenia purpurea L. subsp. purpurea (Raf.) Wherry, a common plant in bogs throughout Canada and the northeastern United States (Schnell, 1979
). This subspecies ranges from Maryland northward, but the entire species (including the three varieties of subsp. venosa [Raf.] Wherry) ranges from Florida to Newfoundland on the eastern coast of North America and westward across Canada (Schnell, 1979
). The single-flowered inflorescence of S. purpurea blooms in late May to early June. Capsules mature over the summer and dehisce in late fall, releasing 5001500 seeds each. Its seeds are small (1.82.4 mm in length) and unornamented and have nondeep morphophysiological dormancy (Ellison, 2001
). Field work for this study was conducted at Hawley Bog, an approximately 3-ha ombrotrophic stream headwaters bog in northwestern Massachusetts, USA (Moizuk and Livingston, 1966
). Sarracenia purpurea seeds are not found in the persistent seed bank at Hawley Bog (A. M. Ellison and H. R. Steinhoff, Mount Holyoke College, unpublished data).
| METHODS AND RESULTS |
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Second, in October 1999 we planted five replicate plots of 100 seeds each on the Sphagnum mat. Seeds were planted just below the Sphagnum surface on relatively flat portions of the bog mat in regular 10 x 10 grids with 2-cm spacing between seeds. The plots' corners were flagged to allow for their relocation. We censussed these plots monthly during the 2000 growing season and again at the end of the 2001 growing season. Very few seedlings successfully established in these plots. Only one seedling was found in 2000, whereas in 2001 we found 20 seedlings (8, 1, 10, 0, 1, respectively, in the five plots). Based on these data, we estimate the probability of successful seedling establishment to be approximately 5%.
Does estimated dispersal and establishment mirror observed plant distributions?
If our estimates of average dispersal distance, shape of dispersal curves, and probability of establishment are realistic, we should see these values reflected in the spatial distribution of adult and juvenile plants. We therefore mapped all S. purpurea individuals in two 5 x 5 m plots at Hawley Bog. Each plant was located (±1 cm) using a Sonin electronic rangefinder (Forestry Suppliers) and the rosette diameter measured. Plants <10 cm in diameter were considered juveniles, and those
10 cm were considered adults, as we have never seen a plant <10 cm flower. We located 43 plants in plot 1 and 303 in plot 2. The smallest plants found had rosette diameters of 0.51 cm. Spatial clumping was assessed visually and by comparing the empirical distribution of plants to that predicted from a random (Poisson) process. Visualization and analysis were done with the SpatialStats module of S-Plus 6 for Windows (Insightful Corporation, Seattle, Washington, USA). In all plots, spatial clustering of plants was clear (Fig. 2). In both plots, significant clustering of plants occurred at spatial scales up to 200 cm (P < 0.05, based on Monte Carlo simulations of Ripley's K function [Ripley, 1976
]). Additionally, in plot 2, we observed significant spatial autocorrelation in rosette diameters; large plants tended to cluster with other large plants, and small plants tended to cluster with other small plants (Moran's statistic = 3.4, exact P = 0.006). For plot 1, in which sample size was comparatively small, no significant spatial autocorrelation was observed (Moran's statistic = 0.09, exact P = 0.47).
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| DISCUSSION |
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Sarracenia seeds are very small, and they have no obvious ornamentation, eliasomes, or other structures to attract potential long-distance dispersers. Although seeds of S. purpurea are hydroscopic (A. M. Ellison, Mount Holyoke College, personal observation) and long-distance dispersal may be effected by flotation, the maximum dispersal distance recorded for another water-dispersed herb, Mimulus guttatus DC, is only 4 m (Waser, Vickery, and Price, 1982
). If S. purpurea seeds dispersed by water have a similar dispersal distance, or even one that is 12 orders of magnitude greater, they are still unlikely to disperse easily between isolated bogs. Thus, the broad range expansion of S. purpurea since the end of the Pleistocene glaciation, from the southern coastal plains up the east coast of North America and across Canada to British Columbia, is explicable only by invoking rare, very long-distance transport events.
The population genetic structure of S. purpurea suggests that such long-distance dispersal events have occurred and have led to diversification by isolation. This taxon is normally divided into two subspecies, subsp. purpurea and subsp. venosa, with the former occurring northward from Maryland, just south of the limit of the Pleistocene glaciation, and the latter occurring from Maryland south (Schnell, 1979
). Three disjunct varieties have been described for the southern subspecies: var. venosa (Raf.) Fernald that is found on the southern Atlantic coastal plain of the United States, var. montana Schnell & Determann that grows in the Appalachian Mountains of Georgia and the Carolinas, and var. burkii Schnell that is found only on the coastal plain of the Gulf of Mexico in Florida and Louisiana (Schnell, 1993
; Schnell and Determann, 1997
). The latter variety has been recently elevated to species status as S. rosea Naczi, Case & Case (Naczi et al., 1999
). These disjunct occurrences of the subspecies and varieties of S. purpurea correspond to genetic differentiation (Godt and Hamrick, 1998
), morphological variation (Naczi et al., 1999
), and differences in seed size and dormancy requirements (Ellison, 2001
).
Throughout its range, however, S. purpurea occurs in isolated bogs. Rare long-distance dispersal events could have resulted in the distributional pattern of subspecies and varieties if diversification occurred in peripheral bogs following dispersal. Seed size and dormancy vary little within a subspecies or variety (Ellison, 2001
), but genetic and morphological differentiation within and among populations of each subspecies and variety have not been investigated. Such studies are needed to assess the prevalence of founder effects in this species, with an eye towards determining the genetic variability among bog plants generally. The occurrence of so many isolated populations of a single taxon presents a unique challenge to any general theory of long-range seed dispersal (e.g., Clark et al., 1998
) and an opportunity to understand better the potential for species persistence in highly fragmented habitats.
| FOOTNOTES |
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2 Author for reprint requests (aellison{at}fas.harvard.edu
), current address (as of 1 July 2002): Harvard University, Harvard Forest, P.O. Box 68, Petersham, MA 01366 USA ![]()
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Schnell D. E. R. O. Determann 1997 Sarracenia purpurea L. ssp. venosa (Raf.) Wherry var. montana Schnell & Determann (Sarraceniaceae): a new variety. Castanea 62: 60-62
Waser N. M. R. K. Vickery M. V. Price 1982 Patterns of seed dispersal and population differentiation in Mimulus guttatus. Evolution 36: 761
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