Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Effects of leaf removal on reproductions vs. belowground storage in Trillium grandiflorum
Author
Lubbers, A. E., M. J. Lechowicz
Publication Year
1969
Body

The objective of this study was to examine flexibility in allocation to storage and reproduction with respect to loss of leaf area in Trillium grandiflorum, a perennial herb of temperate deciduous forests in eastern North America. Natural pollination limited seed set in one year but not another at the study site near Montreal, Quebec; it is likely that year-to-year variation in pollinator availability is the norm. Removal of leaf or floral bract tissues did not affect mean seed set, but leaf removal did reduce allocation of biomass and nonstructural carbohydrates to rhizomes. As the level of defoliation increased, the correlation between reproduction and storage within plants became increasingly negative. Although the mean seasonal leaf conductance of partially defoliated plants was greater than that of intact plants, any compensatory increases in photosynthesis that may have occurred were apparently insufficient to prevent the reduced allocation to belowground storage. The allocation of resources to current reproduction at the expense of survival and future reproduction possibly reflects the selective effects of unpredictable availability of pollinators for this spring ephemeral.

Language
en
Keywords
defoliation
resource allocation
deciduous forest
reproductive biology
spring ephemeral
total nonstructural carbohydrates
Trillium grandiflorum
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