Restoring oak forests through direct seeding or planting: Protocol for a continental-scale experiment

Leverkus, Alexandro B. and Levy, Laura and Andivia, Enrique and Annighöfer, Peter and De Cuyper, Bart and Ivetic, Vladan and Lazdina, Dagnija and Löf, Magnus and Villar-Salvador, Pedro and Morán-López, Teresa (2021) Restoring oak forests through direct seeding or planting: Protocol for a continental-scale experiment. PLOS ONE, 16 (11). e0259552. ISSN 1932-6203

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Abstract

The choice of revegetating via direct seeding or planting nursery-grown seedlings influences the potential stresses suffered by seedlings such as herbivory and drought. The outcome of the balance between both revegetation methods may ultimately depend on how species identity and traits such as seed and seedling size interact with environmental conditions. To test this, we will conduct a continental-scale experiment consisting of one mini-experiment replicated by multiple participants across Europe. Each participant will establish a site with seeded and planted individuals of one or more native, locally growing oak (Quercus) species; the selection of this genus aims to favour continental-scale participation and to allow testing the response of a widely distributed genus of broad ecological and economic relevance. At each site, participants will follow the present protocol for seed collection, seeding in the field, nursery cultivation, outplanting, protection against herbivores, site maintenance, and measurement of seedling performance and environmental variables. Each measurement on each species at each site will produce one effect size; the data will be analysed through mixed-effects meta-analysis. With this approach we will assess the main effect of revegetation method, species, plant functional traits, and the potential effect of site-specific effect moderators. Overall, we will provide a continental-scale estimate on the seeding vs. planting dilemma and analyse to what extent the differences in environmental conditions across sites, seed size, functional traits, and the phylogenetic relatedness of species can account for the differences in the effect of revegetation method on seedling performance across study sites and species.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Institute Archives > Geological Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 15 Mar 2023 08:57
Last Modified: 22 Jun 2024 07:55
URI: http://eprint.subtopublish.com/id/eprint/668

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