The Response of Spore Germination of Mosses to Single and Combined Fire-Related Cues.

Plants (Basel)

Key Laboratory of Geographical Processes and Ecological Security in Changbai Mountains, Ministry of Education, School of Geographical Sciences, Northeast Normal University, Renmin 5268, Changchun 130024, China.

Published: February 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Plants in flammable ecosystems adapt to fire by enhancing germination through smoke exposure and heat shock.
  • The study focuses on how fire impacts spore germination of dominant peatland plants, hypothesizing that moderate heat and smoke positively affect germinability while high temperatures hinder it.
  • Results reveal that while 100 °C heat kills spores, moderate temperatures (40 and 60 °C) boost germination in most species, particularly benefiting hollow species, and highlight the importance of heat and smoke in promoting spore germination in wetland mosses after fire.

Article Abstract

Plants in flammable ecosystems have different response strategies to fire, such as increasing germination after exposure to smoke and break of dormancy through heat shock. Peatlands are ecosystems that are more likely to be disturbed by fire with increasing temperatures, but it is not clear how fire affects spore germination of , the dominant plants in peatlands. Here, we hypothesize that spores respond positively to single and combined treatments of moderate heat and smoke (by increased germinability), while spore germinability decreases in response to high temperature. We exposed the spores of four selected species (, , and ) collected from peatlands in the Changbai Mountains to heat (40, 60 and 100 °C), on its own and combined with smoke-water treatments. Our results showed that a heat of 100 °C inhibited the spore germination or even killed spores of all species, while spore germination of three (, and ) of the four species was promoted by 40 and 60 °C heat compared to the control (20 °C). Hollow species ( and ) showed a stronger positive responsive to heat than hummock species ( and ). spores responded positively to the combined heat and smoke treatment while the other species did not. For the first time, we demonstrate the positive effects of heat on its own and in combination with smoke on spore germination in wetland mosses, which may be important for the establishment and persistence of peatmoss populations after fire.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8875694PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants11040485DOI Listing

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