Seedling emergence constitutes a critical recruitment step, and early growth relates to plant competitive ability. Understanding their drivers has implications for forestry and forest ecosystem conservation, restoration, and adaptation to climate change. We seeded 6984 acorns in an experiment with 97 cases at 45 sites in 15 European countries, encompassing 12 oak species. We tested whether the quality of the acorn batch, site-level weather and soil characteristics, year of seeding, and species’ mean specific leaf area (SLA) affected the emergence and early growth of seedlings after the first summer. Germination potential and acorn dry weight, measured under controlled conditions, were positively associated with emergence and early growth. Seedling emergence was negatively associated with the mean monthly temperature and cumulative winter precipitation, and it was higher in the seedling cohort that was spared from the 2021 drought. Additionally, seedling emergence was positively related to soil nutrient concentration and negatively to increasing soil pH, but not to water-holding capacity, and growth was unrelated to soils. Species-level SLA was not related to either response. The four main study species –Quercus cerris, Q. ilex, Q. petraea, and Q. robur– responded similarly to weather but not to soil conditions. We conclude that, at a continental scale, and assuming that species establish within their current distributions, (a) oak seedling emergence and early growth are associated with acorn quality rather than species identity or SLA, (b) they are highest at sites with low winter precipitation and temperature, (c) emergence is reduced in dry years, and d) soil properties play a secondary role at this early recruitment stage.

Drivers of seedling emergence and early growth of 12 European oak species: Results from a cross-continental experiment / Alexandro B. Leverkus, María Medina, Alba Lazaro-Gonzalez, Laura Levy, Olivia Lorente-Casalini, Marino P. Reyes Martín, Enrique Andivia, Alessandro Bizzarri, Henrik Bohlenius, Vito Cambria, Claudia Cocozza, Branislav Cvjetkovic , Giovanbattista de Dato, Lenka Ehrenbergerova, Peter Ferus, Lorena Gomez-Aparicio, Arndt Hampe, Kjersti Holt Hanssen, Marcin Jakubowski, Ivona Kerkez Jankovic, Marcin Klisz, Wojciech Kowalkowski, Klaus Kremer, Jelena Lazarevic, Dagnija Lazdin, Emanuele Lingua, Magnus Lof, Manuel E. Lucas-Borja, Adrian Łukowski, Paula Maia, Paola Mairota, Alberto Maltoni, Barbara Mariotti, Raffaella Marzano, Lucia Mondanelli, Antonio Montagnoli, Maria Cristina Monteverdi, Francisco B. Navarro Reyes, Juan A. Oliet, Maria S. Patrício, Zoran Poduska, Vladan Popovic, Radosław Puchałka, Piotr Robakowski, Piotr Sewerniak, Carmen Urena-Lara , Pedro Villar-Salvador, Johanna Witzell, Nicolo Anselmetto, Jürgen Bauhus, Raquel Benavides, Paola Bolzon, María D. Carbonero Munoz, Jorge Castro, Donato Chiatante, Sofia Corticeiro, Michele De Sanctis, Jovana Devetakovic, Karlis Dumins, Fløistad Inger Sundheim, M. Noelia Jimenez Morales, Sanja Jovanovic, Branko Kanjevac, Johan Kroon, Dario La Montagna, Roman Malik, Antonín Martiník, Luis Matías, Ryan McClory, Fabio Meloni, Manuel Merino Ceballos, Ricardo A. Moreno Llorca, Marina Nonic, Luís Nunes, Pedro Antonio Plaza-Alvarez, Roberta Proietti, Stefano Puccinelli, Jose María Rey Benayas, Marek Szczerba, Arkadiusz Tomczak, Ana Topalovic, Viktorija Vendin. - In: FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT. - ISSN 0378-1127. - ELETTRONICO. - (2025), pp. 1-15.

Drivers of seedling emergence and early growth of 12 European oak species: Results from a cross-continental experiment

Alessandro Bizzarri;Claudia Cocozza;Alberto Maltoni;Barbara Mariotti;Lucia Mondanelli;
2025

Abstract

Seedling emergence constitutes a critical recruitment step, and early growth relates to plant competitive ability. Understanding their drivers has implications for forestry and forest ecosystem conservation, restoration, and adaptation to climate change. We seeded 6984 acorns in an experiment with 97 cases at 45 sites in 15 European countries, encompassing 12 oak species. We tested whether the quality of the acorn batch, site-level weather and soil characteristics, year of seeding, and species’ mean specific leaf area (SLA) affected the emergence and early growth of seedlings after the first summer. Germination potential and acorn dry weight, measured under controlled conditions, were positively associated with emergence and early growth. Seedling emergence was negatively associated with the mean monthly temperature and cumulative winter precipitation, and it was higher in the seedling cohort that was spared from the 2021 drought. Additionally, seedling emergence was positively related to soil nutrient concentration and negatively to increasing soil pH, but not to water-holding capacity, and growth was unrelated to soils. Species-level SLA was not related to either response. The four main study species –Quercus cerris, Q. ilex, Q. petraea, and Q. robur– responded similarly to weather but not to soil conditions. We conclude that, at a continental scale, and assuming that species establish within their current distributions, (a) oak seedling emergence and early growth are associated with acorn quality rather than species identity or SLA, (b) they are highest at sites with low winter precipitation and temperature, (c) emergence is reduced in dry years, and d) soil properties play a secondary role at this early recruitment stage.
2025
1
15
Alexandro B. Leverkus, María Medina, Alba Lazaro-Gonzalez, Laura Levy, Olivia Lorente-Casalini, Marino P. Reyes Martín, Enrique Andivia, Alessandro Bi...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/1438516
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