DURHAM, N.C. 鈥 As trees age and grow, it seems logical to assume their ability to produce seeds, nuts or fruits will continue to grow, too, but a new 91社区福利-led study of nearly 600 species worldwide nips that assumption in the bud.

In about 80% of the species examined, trees鈥 fecundity, or physical potential to reproduce, peaked or plateaued as they reached an intermediate size. After that, fecundity declined.

The other 20% of species don鈥檛 necessarily have a secret elixir of youth to ward off this deterioration, the researchers say. They, too, likely experience a decline in fecundity past a certain age and size. There just isn鈥檛 enough data yet on older, larger trees of their species to know for sure.

鈥淭ree fruits and nuts comprise 3% of the human diet and are also important for many birds and small mammals, while tree seeds are vital for forest regeneration,鈥 said Tong Qiu, a postdoctoral researcher at Duke鈥檚 Nicholas School of the Environment, who led the study. 鈥淭o manage and conserve these resources effectively, we need to know if declines in fecundity are likely to occur, and at what size or age they might set in.鈥

Answering those questions has, until now, forced ecologists to go out on a limb.

鈥淥n one hand, it鈥檚 extremely implausible that fecundity in trees indefinitely increases with age and size, given what we know about senescence, or age-related deterioration, in humans and all other multi-celled organisms,鈥 said James S. Clark, Nicholas Distinguished Professor of Environmental Science at Duke. 鈥淥n the other hand, strictly speaking, there鈥檚 been no conclusive evidence to disprove it.鈥

Because many fruit tree crops are replaced every two or three decades as yields begin to decline, and because of the difficulty of monitoring seed production in non-cultivated trees, most studies on tree fecundity have relied on datasets that skew toward younger trees that are still small or medium-sized, Clark explained. Lacking sufficient data on seed production in a species鈥 later stages of development, scientists have had to approximate these numbers based on averages from earlier stages.

An aging tree
An aging tree. Credit: Jim Clark, 91社区福利

The problem with that, Clark said, is that trees don鈥檛 necessarily produce a regular number of seeds each year at any size or age. Though production tends to be heavier overall in a tree鈥檚 earlier stages, there can be huge variations from year to year and tree to tree 鈥 from zero seeds one year to millions the next. So, using past species averages to project future production can lead to overestimation of a tree鈥檚 actual potential.

The new study avoids this pitfall by synthesizing data on seed production and maturation status for 585,670 individual trees from 597 species monitored through the Masting Inference and Forecasting (MASTIF) network of long-term research sites. Clark 鈥榮 lab has helped develop MASTIF in recent years in collaboration with dozens of institutional partners around the world.

The network鈥檚 global database contains detailed records, often stretching back many decades, on the annual seed production of trees growing at more than 500 different sites in North America, South America, Asia, Europe and Africa. New or recent observations 鈥搕ypically obtained through seed traps or estimates of total seed production based on cone counts 鈥 can easily be entered into the database to add to our knowledge base.

Having access to such a vast repository of raw, unfiltered data enabled Qiu, Clark and their colleagues to develop a model calibrated to avoid overestimation and calculate long-term fecundity more accurately.

鈥淔or most of the species we study, including humans, one of the most fundamental variables we measure is birth rates,鈥 Clark said. 鈥淔or animals, it鈥檚 often easy 鈥搚ou count the number of eggs in a nest or pups in a litter. But when you get to trees, it鈥檚 trickier. You can鈥檛 directly observe how many seeds are being produced, and, as this study shows, approximation doesn鈥檛 work either. You need another way to do that. Our model can help meet that need.鈥

Clark, Qiu and their colleagues published their peer-reviewed study the week of Aug. 16 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Fifty-nine researchers from 13 countries or territories 鈥 Chile, Italy, Canada, Poland, France, Spain, Switzerland, Japan, Slovenia, Germany, Panama, Puerto Rico and the United States 鈥 co-authored the study with Clark and Qiu.

Primary funding came from the National Science Foundation (NSF), NASA and the French Minist猫re de 鈥橢nseignement Sup茅rieur de la Recherche et de l鈥橧nnovation鈥檚 鈥淢ake Our Planet Great Again鈥 initiative. Data sources included the National Ecological Observation Network (NEON) funded by the NSF.

In addition to Clark鈥檚 primary faculty appointment at Duke鈥檚 Nicholas School of the Environment, he holds an appointment at the Universit茅 Grenoble Alpes through the Institute National de Recherche pour l鈥橝griculture, l鈥橝limentation et l鈥橢nvironnement.

CITATION: 鈥淚s There Tree Senescence? The Fecundity Evidence,鈥 T. Qiu, M.C. Aavena Acuna, R. Andrus, D. Ascoli, Y. Bergeron, R. Berretti, M. Bogdziewicz, T. Boivin, R. Bonal, T. Caignard, R. Calama, J.J. Camarero, C. Clark, B. Courbaud, S. Delzon, S. Donoso Calderon, W. Farfan-Rios, C.A. Gehring, G.S. Gilbert, C.H. Greenberg, Q. Guo, J. Hille Ris Lambers, K. Hoshizaki, I. Ibanez, V. Journ茅, C.L. Kilner, R. Kobe, W.D. Koenig, G. Kunstler, J.M. LaMontagne, M. Ledwon, J.A. Lutz, R. Motta, J.A. Myers, T.A. Nagel, C.L. Nu帽ez, I.S. Pearse, 艁. Piechnik, J. Poulson, R. Poulton-Kamakura, M.D. Redmond, C.D. Reid, K.C. Rodman, C.L. Scher, H. Schmidt Van Marle, B. Seget, S. Sharma, M. Silman, J.J. Swenson, M. Swift, M. Uriarte, G. Vacchiano, T.T. Veblen, A.V. Whipple, T.G. Whitham, A.P. Wion, J. Wright, K. Zhu, J.K. Zimmerman, M. Zywiec, and J.S. Clark; Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Aug. 16, 2021. DOI: .

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