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Rainfall, not soil temperature, will limit the seed germination of dry forest species with climate change

Authors :
Fabrício Francisco Santos da Silva
J. R. Matias
T. A. Taura
Jaciara de Souza Bispo
Bárbara França Dantas
Gilmara Moreira de Oliveira
Hugh W. Pritchard
Francislene Angelotti
Claudinéia Regina Pelacani
Charlotte E. Seal
Magna Soelma Beserra de Moura
BARBARA FRANCA DANTAS, CPATSA
MAGNA SOELMA BESERRA DE MOURA, CPATSA
Claudinéia R. Pelacani
FRANCISLENE ANGELOTTI, CPATSA
TATIANA AYAKO TAURA, CPATSA
Gilmara M. Oliveira
Jaciara S. Bispo
Janete R. Matias
Fabricio F. S. Silva
Hugh W. Pritchard
Charlotte E. Seal.
Source :
Repositório Institucional da EMBRAPA (Repository Open Access to Scientific Information from EMBRAPA-Alice), Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária (Embrapa), instacron:EMBRAPA
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Drylands are predicted to become more arid and saline due to increasing global temperature and drought. Although species from the Caatinga, a Brazilian tropical dry forest, are tolerant to these conditions, the capacity for germination to withstand extreme soil temperature and water deficit associated with climate change remains to be quantified. We aimed to evaluate how germination will be affected under future climate change scenarios of limited water and increased temperature. Seeds of three species were germinated at different temperatures and osmotic potentials. Thermal time and hydrotime model parameters were established and thresholds for germination calculated. Germination performance in 2055 was predicted, by combining temperature and osmotic/salt stress thresholds, considering soil temperature and moisture following rainfall events. The most pessimistic climate scenario predicts an increase of 3.9 °C in soil temperature and 30% decrease in rainfall. Under this scenario, soil temperature is never lower than the minimum and seldomly higher than maximum temperature thresholds for germination. As long as the soil moisture (0.139 cm3 cm3) requirements are met, germination can be achieved in 1 day. According to the base water potential and soil characteristics, the minimum weekly rainfall for germination is estimated to be 17.5 mm. Currently, the required minimum rainfall occurs in 14 weeks of the year but will be reduced to 4 weeks by 2055. This may not be sufficient for seedling recruitment of some species in the natural environment. Thus, in future climate scenarios, rainfall rather than temperature will be extremely limiting for seed germination. Made available in DSpace on 2020-02-21T18:10:31Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Rainfallnotsoiltemperaturewilllimittheseedgerminationofdry2020.pdf: 3202683 bytes, checksum: 1a6594dd57f074a3945a09b035657ac6 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2020

Details

ISSN :
14321939
Volume :
192
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Oecologia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3d718117771c834e95807d4cfa6a1297