Drivers of seedling emergence and early growth of 12 European oak species: Results from a cross-continental experiment
Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2026
Author
Leverkus, Alexandro B.
Medina, María
Lázaro-González, Alba
Levy, Laura
Lorente-Casalini, Olivia
Reyes Martín, Marino P.
Andivia, Enrique
Bizzarri, Alessandro
Böhlenius, Henrik
Cambria, Vito E.
Cocozza, Claudia
Cvjetković, Branislav
de Dato, Giovanbattista
Ehrenbergerová, Lenka
Ferus, Peter
Gómez-Aparicio, Lorena
Hampe, Arndt
Hanssen, Kjersti Holt
Kerkez Janković, Ivona
Klisz, Marcin
Kremer, Klaus
Lazarevic, Jelena
Lazdiņa, Dagnija
Lingua, Emanuele
Löf, Magnus
Lucas-Borja, Manuel E.
Maia, Paula
Mairota, Paola
Maltoni, Alberto
Mariotti, Barbara
Marzano, Raffaella
Mondanelli, Lucia
Montagnoli, Antonio
Monteverdi, Maria Cristina
Navarro Reyes, Francisco B.
Oliet, Juan A.
Patrício, Maria S.
Poduška, Zoran
Popovic, Vladan
Puchałka, Radosław
Sewerniak, Piotr
Ureña-Lara, Carmen
Villar-Salvador, Pedro
Witzell, Johanna
Anselmetto, Nicolò
Bauhus, Jürgen
Benavides, Raquel
Bolzon, Paola
Carbonero Muñoz, María D.
Castro, Jorge
Chiatante, Donato
Corticeiro, Sofia
De Sanctis, Michele
Devetaković, Jovana
Dūmiņš, Kārlis
Sundheim, Fløistad Inger
Jiménez Morales, M. Noelia
Jovanović, Sanja
Kanjevac, Branko
Kroon, Johan
La Montagna, Dario
Malik, Roman
Martiník, Antonín
Matías, Luis
McClory, Ryan
Meloni, Fabio
Merino Ceballos, Manuel
Moreno Llorca, Ricardo A.
Nonić, Marina
Nunes, Luís
Plaza-Álvarez, Pedro Antonio
Proietti, Roberta
Puccinelli, Stefano
Rey Benayas, José María
Szczerba, Marek
Topalovic, Ana
Vendiņa, Viktorija
Faculty
Wydział Leśny i Technologii Drewna
Journal
Forest Ecology and Management
ISSN
0378-1127
Volume
599
Number
1 January 2026
Pages from-to
art. 123223
Abstract (EN)
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.
License
CC-BY - Attribution
Open access date
October 28, 2025