Resource Allocation and Seed Size Selection in Perennial Plants under Pollen Limitation

2017 ◽  
Vol 190 (3) ◽  
pp. 430-441 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qiaoqiao Huang ◽  
Martin Burd ◽  
Zhiwei Fan
Primates ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 239-245 ◽  
Author(s):  
Britta Kerstin Kunz ◽  
Karl Eduard Linsenmair

1999 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. D. Branch ◽  
A. K. Culbreath

Abstract The major peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) producing regions in the U.S. are currently faced with an increasing tomato spotted wilt tospovirus (TSWV) problem, and the most effective control is the use of resistant cultivars. This study was conducted to compare the field performance and TSWV disease intensity among different seed sizes of two runner-type cultivars. For three consecutive years, 1995–97, the effect of continuous seed size selection on yield, grade, and TSWV intensity among the two runner cultivars Georgia Green and Florunner was evaluated at the Univ. of Georgia Coastal Plain Exp. Sta. Sound mature kernels from both cultivars were divided into four seed sizes (jumbo, medium, No. 1, and the combined mill run check). Seed size selection pressure was applied to both cultivars each year. Seed stock for planting each year was obtained from the corresponding seed size produced the previous year. The results showed that the Georgia Green cultivar significantly out-performed the Florunner cultivar in yield, grade, dollar value, and had significantly less TSWV. Georgia Green had a similar percentage of jumbo seed, more medium seed, and fewer No. 1 seed than Florunner. Both runner-type cultivars responded similarly to continuous selection pressure with small but significant changes in seed size distribution over a relatively short 3-yr period.


2006 ◽  
Vol 54 (7) ◽  
pp. 691 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhao Zhigang ◽  
Du Guozhen ◽  
Zhou Xianhui ◽  
Wang Mantang ◽  
Ren Qingji

We investigated the adaptive response of alpine plants to elevational gradients by examining reproductive traits and resource allocation of three species of Ranunculaceae with contrasting mating systems in alpine and subalpine populations on the eastern QinhaiTibetan Plateu. The results showed that (i) at alpine sites, the self-incompatible Trollius ranunculoides Hemsley tended to become limited by pollination rather than by nutrient availability, although the self-compatible Anemone rivularis var. flore-minore Maxim. Fl. Tang. and A. obtusiloba D.Don. seemed not to be limited by pollen availability; (ii) influences on the reproduction of these three species induced by high altitude were seen in different reproductive characters, and the influences were, to some extent, dependent on the plant. Female investment in the self-compatible A. rivularis and A. obtusiloba was influenced by altitude and plant size; with a much lower carpel number per flower and larger mean seed size in A. rivularis, and a much higher carpel number per flower and smaller mean seed size in A. obtusiloba, at a higher altitude. Floral investment in the self-incompatible T. ranunculoides was also influenced by altitude and plant size, with a smaller single-flower size and larger seed at the higher altitude. Results also showed that (iii) reproductive allocation to flowering and fruiting did not always decrease with altitude as predicted. This may be due to higher nutrient availability in soil at alpine sites. (iv) Although self-pollination may be an assurance mechanism alleviating pollination limitation, changes in allocation pattern, (i.e. the male-biased floral sexual allocation in A. rivularis and the higher allocation to attractive structure in A. obtusiloba) seem to promote pollinator visits at the high altitude.


PeerJ ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. e5384 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marina M. Strelin ◽  
Marcelo A. Aizen

BackgroundA classical dichotomous perspective proposes that either pollination or plant resources limit seed production. However, ovule number could also be limiting when pollination results in complete ovule fertilization and there are more plant resources available than needed to develop seeds. Moreover, this dichotomous view assumes that all flowers of a plant have equal access to a shared pool of resources, although these are frequently compartmentalized within plant modules, for example, inflorescences. How ovule number, pollination and resources affect seed production in physiologically-compartmentalized rather than physiologically-integrated plants has yet to be explored. We used raspberry (Rubus idaeus) to address this question.MethodsWe first assessed if ovule number affected the fraction of ovules that develop into seed (i.e., seed set) and whether this effect related to the extent of physiological integration among flowers within plants. This was achieved by statistically testing predictions on the sign and level of plant organization (i.e., among flowers within inflorescences, among inflorescences within ramets, and among ramets) of the relation between ovule number and seed set given different degrees of physiological integration. We then explored whether the relation between ovule number and seed set was affected by plant age (used here as a surrogate of resource availability) and pollination intensity (open-pollination vs. exclusion).ResultsWithin inflorescences, flowers with more ovules set a larger fraction of seeds. On the other hand, seed set at the inflorescence level was negatively related to the average number of ovules per flower. Seed set increased with ovule number and open-pollination, and decreased with ramet age. However, ovule number explained more variation in seed set than ramet age and pollination treatment. Ramet age affected the strength of the relation of seed set to ovule number, which was stronger in old than young ramets. Pollination did not alter the strength of this relation to any significant extent.DiscussionResults reveal the importance of ovule number as an overriding factor affecting seed set. Within inflorescences, resources appear to be differentially allocated to developing fruits from flowers with many ovules. This is consistent with the fact that in the raspberry a large proportion of the carbon invested in fruit development is fixed by the inflorescence subtending leaf. Differential resource allocation to flowers with many ovules is not affected by pollinator exclusion, being stronger in resource-exhausted ramets. This suggests that the effects of pollen limitation and resource allocation are compartmentalized at the inflorescence level. Consequently, modular plants can be viewed as reproductive mosaics where either ovule number, pollination or resources limit the number of seeds set by different flowers, so that improvements in any of them could increase plant seed production.


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