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Bottlenecks and spatiotemporal variation in the sexual reproduction pathway of perennial meadow plants
- Source :
- Basic and Applied Ecology, 7, 1, pp. 71-81, Basic and Applied Ecology 7 (2006) 1, Basic and Applied Ecology, 7, 71-81, Basic and Applied Ecology, 7(1), 71-81
- Publication Year :
- 2006
-
Abstract
- Summary Sexual reproduction is important for the growth of populations and the maintenance of genetic diversity. Several steps are involved in the sexual reproduction pathway of plants: the production of flowers, the production of seeds and the establishment of seedlings from seeds. In this paper we quantify the relative importance and spatiotemporal variability of these different steps for four grassland perennials: Centaurea jacea , Cirsium dissectum , Hypochaeris radicata and Succisa pratensis . We compared undisturbed meadows with meadows where the top soil layer had been removed as a restoration measure. Data on the number of flower heads per flowering rosette, the numbers of flowers and seeds per flower head, and the seedling establishment probabilities per seed were collected by field observations and experiments in several sites and years. Combination of these data shows that H. radicata and S. pratensis have higher recruitment rates (1.9 and 3.3 seedlings per year per flowering rosette, respectively) than the more clonal C. dissectum and C. jacea (0.027 and 0.23, respectively). Seedling establishment is the major bottleneck for successful sexual reproduction in all species. Large losses also occurred due to failing seed set in C. dissectum . Comparison of the coefficients of variation per step in space and time revealed that spatiotemporal variability was largest in seedling establishment, followed closely by flower head production and seed set.
- Subjects :
- Plant Ecology and Nature Conservation
solidago-altissima
Biology
Hypochaeris
food
Cirsium
Centaurea jacea
establishment
Botany
wind
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
WIMEK
Plant Ecology
food and beverages
population-dynamics
dispersal seed predation
Succisa pratensis
biology.organism_classification
colonization
food.food
Sexual reproduction
grassland plants
germination
recruitment
Germination
Seedling
Seed predation
Plantenecologie en Natuurbeheer
microsite limitation
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14391791
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Basic and Applied Ecology, 7, 1, pp. 71-81, Basic and Applied Ecology 7 (2006) 1, Basic and Applied Ecology, 7, 71-81, Basic and Applied Ecology, 7(1), 71-81
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....07118c30f8aa893ac1043cd9a5cbd4e0