Publication | Open Access
Functional traits explain variation in plant life history strategies
676
Citations
50
References
2013
Year
Plants exhibit diverse life history strategies, ranging from fast, short‑lived, high‑seed species to slow, long‑lived, low‑seed species. The study shows that simple morphological traits—seed size, leaf longevity, and wood density—can predict whether a species’ population growth is driven mainly by survival or by growth and fecundity, enabling complex dynamics to be captured with few measurable characters.
Significance Plants have evolved diverse life history strategies to succeed in Earth’s varied environments. Some species grow quickly, produce copious seeds, and die within a few weeks. Other species grow slowly and rarely produce seeds but live thousands of years. We show that simple morphological measurements can predict where a species falls within the global range of life history strategies: species with large seeds, long-lived leaves, or dense wood have population growth rates influenced primarily by survival, whereas individual growth and fecundity have a stronger influence on the dynamics of species with small seeds, short-lived leaves, or soft wood. This finding increases the ability of scientists to represent complex population processes with a few easily measured character traits.
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