Recruitment of Quercus agrifolia in
central California: the importance of shrub-dominated patches
Callaway, R. M. and F. W. Davis
Journal of Vegetation Science 9: 647-656.
Many perennial plants strongly enhance the survival
of seedlings of other species. We studied patterns of long-term recruitment
of Quercus agrifolia (Coastal live oak) associated with shrub-dominated
communities by counting Q. agrifolia recruits on a time sequence of
historical aerial photographs and comparing recruitment among mapped
patches of coastal sage scrub, chaparral, and grassland in an 1120-ha
landscape. Because we could not identify new recruits in existing
woodlands with aerial photographs, we studied the recruitment of Q.
agrifolia in this vegetation type indirectly by comparing population
size structures and the spatial relationships between shrubs and recruits
among woodlands that varied in understory community type. At the landscape
scale, recruitment was higher in coastal sage scrub vegetation than
predicted by the extent of its coverage, commensurate with the spatial
coverage of chaparral, and very low in grassland. Recruitment within
woodland communities also varied considerably. In woodland communities
on sheltered, north-oriented topography with understories dominated
by shrubs, there were large numbers of small Q. agrifolia, and recruits
were not significantly spatially associated with shrubs within plots.
In woodlands with herbaceous understories there were few individuals
in the small size classes, and recruits were strongly spatially associated
with shrubs within plots. Woodlands with shrub-dominated understories
have population structures that appear to be stable, but woodlands
with herbaceous understories exhibit size structures associated with
declining populations. Quercus recruitment into shrub-dominated patches
corresponds with previous documentation of facilitative relationships
between shrubs and oak seedlings, and suggests the occurrence of an
unusual form of patch dynamics in these landscapes.