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The role of seed reproduction in the dynamics of established populations of <i>Hieracium floribundum</i> and a comparison with that of vegetative reproduction
50
Citations
3
References
1975
Year
BiologyVegetative ReproductionFertilityBotanyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyPlant ReproductionCrop EstablishmentCrowded PopulationSeed GerminationSeed ReproductionPlant EcologyPopulation DevelopmentCrowded PartsViable SeedPublic HealthPopulation Genetics
In the crowded parts of patches of Hieracium floribundum Wimm. and Grab., which were established for at least a decade in an ungrazed pasture, 7–10% of the population (3700 individuals/m 2 ) flowered. Of the plants that flowered, 94% were alive a year later, but only 5% of these flowered. Abortion of flower heads was common; one half of all those which were initiated in early June had aborted by flowering time in early July. Freshly dispersed seed had a viability of 57%, which was reduced to 17% a year later, after its storage close to the soil surface. Less than 6% of the viable seed was innately dormant. Dry, laboratory-stored seed retained its viability for the year but was slower to germinate than soil-stored seed. In field conditions, germination was temperature inhibited during most of the growing season. Maximum daytime microsite temperatures of less than 32 °C, which is necessary for germination, were found to occur only in early spring and late fall. Successful seedling establishment accounts for 1% of the individuals in a crowded population. Based on the maximum sexual reproduction from plants in crowded populations, a seed has a probability of 1 in 20 000 of becoming an established seedling. A model of population dynamics in a high-density patch traces the fate of seedling establishment, surviving adults, and stolon-derived rosettes for a single year.
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