Title of article :
Cost of Reproduction in a Spring Ephemeral Species, Adonis ramosa (Ranunculaceae): Carbon Budget for Seed Production
Author/Authors :
Kudo، Gaku نويسنده , , Horibata، Satoshi نويسنده , , Hasegawa، Shigeaki F. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
-564
From page :
565
To page :
0
Abstract :
Background and Aims: Spring ephemerals have a specific life-history trait, i.e. shoot growth and sexual reproduction occur simultaneously during a short period from snowmelt to canopy closure in deciduous forests. The aim of this study is to clarify how spring ephemerals invest resources for seed production within a restricted period. Methods: In order to evaluate the cost of reproduction of a typical spring ephemeral species, Adonis ramosa, an experiment was conducted comprising defoliation treatments (intact, one-third and two-thirds leaf-cutting) and fruit manipulations (control, shading and removal) over two growing seasons. In addition, measurements were made of the movements of carbon assimilated via 13C tracing. Key Results: Survival rate was high irrespective of treatments and manipulations. The proportion of flowering plants and plant size decreased as a result of the defoliation treatments over 2 years, but the fruit manipulations did not affect flowering activity or plant size. Seed set and seed number decreased as a result of fruit shading treatment, but the defoliation treatments did not affect current seed production. Individual seed weight also decreased in the second year due to fruit shading. The 13C tracing experiment revealed that young fruits had photosynthetic ability and current photosynthetic products from leaves were mainly transferred to the belowground parts, while translocation to fruit was very small even when fruit photosynthesis was restricted by the shading treatment. Conclusions: Current foliage photosynthetic products are largely stored in the below-ground parts for survival and future growth, and about one-third of the resources for seed production may be attained by fruit photosynthesis. Therefore, the trade-off between current seed production and subsequent growth is weak. The cost of seed production may be buffered by sufficient storage in the belowground organs, effective photosynthesis under high irradiation and self-assimilation ability of fruits.
Keywords :
spring ephemeral , Adonis ramosa , Cost of reproduction , Defoliation , carbon transfer , non-foliar photosynthesis , resource allocation , Seed production
Journal title :
Annals of Botany
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
Annals of Botany
Record number :
118728
Link To Document :
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