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Reproductive Biology of an Amphicarpic Annual, Polygonum thunbergii (Polygonaceae): Spatio‐temporal Changes in Growth, Structure and Reproductive Components of a Population over an Environmental Gradient
Author(s) -
Kawano Shoichi,
Hara Toshihiko,
Hiratsuka Akira,
Matsuo Kazuhito,
Hirota Izumi
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
plant species biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.419
H-Index - 36
eISSN - 1442-1984
pISSN - 0913-557X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1442-1984.1990.tb00196.x
Subject(s) - biology , polygonaceae , competition (biology) , population , intraspecific competition , environmental gradient , botany , agronomy , ecology , habitat , demography , sociology
The process and mechanisms of spatio‐temporal changes in growth, population structure, as well as various yield and reproductive components of a population of an amphicarpic annual, Polygonum thunbergii (Polygonaceae), with two reproductive systems (aerial chasmogamous flowers and subterranean cleistogamous flowers) along an environmental gradient (light, moisture and soil nitrogen levels) were investigated in the field. The results clearly demonstrate that growth and allocation patterns, population structure, and reproductive output of individuals changed sharply along the environmental gradient in response to seasonal and spatial changes in resource availability. Models predicted that light conditions bring about one‐sided competition, whereas nutrient conditions in the soil engender two‐sided competition. As expected, the degree of one‐sided competition was prominent in the case of a planophile, Polygonum thunbergii. Allocation patterns, seed outputs, individual seed size as well as relative energy costs of chasmogamous and cleistogamous seed as affected by light and nutrient levels were also critically analyzed. The most noteworthy finding was that the size of chasmogamous seeds sharply decreased in response to a decrease in the light regime, while cleistogamous seed size remained constant along the gradient. However, relative cost of both chasmogamous and cleistogamous seeds sharply increased with decrease in the light level, reflecting different degrees of environmental stress, biotic interference, or both.