Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2179920 | Flora - Morphology, Distribution, Functional Ecology of Plants | 2011 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
The performance of seeds and seedlings in relation to the age of the mother plant was studied in Carex secalina. Seeds of this sedge can differ substantially in size. We planted 100 C. secalina individuals from three populations in a common garden and followed them for four years. We found that mean seed mass varied with plant age, but the pattern of variation was population-specific, with only one population showing significant reduction in seed mass with age. Similarly, germination frequency changed with age differently in different populations. The relationship between the age of the mother plant and the height of emerged seedlings did not differ between populations. In spite of the fact that plant size and mean seed mass exhibited similar patterns of variation within populations, there was no correlation between these two variables at the level of individuals. This means that the size of C. secalina tufts does not determine how big the seeds will be. Moreover, there was no relationship between mean seed mass and the height of seedlings. Presumably, factors intrinsic to each plant determine the production of either small or large seeds in a population-specific way.
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Authors
Marlena Lembicz, PaweŠOlejniczak, Waldemar Żukowski, Agnieszka M. Bogdanowicz,