Abstract
The life cycles, programme of energy expenditure and allocation to reproduction, and the reproductive efforts of three wildAllium species, i.e.,A. Victorialis ssp.platyphyllum, A. monanthum, andA. Grayi, all native to Japan, were studied and compared. Furthermore, their adaptive strategies were discussed from the point of view of life history strategy. First, the reproductive systems, number of male and female gametes borne, and the number and size of propagules produced were critically investigated. In order to estimate the crude reproductive efficiency (sensu Harper and Ogden, 1970) of these species, sequential harvests were taken and the plants were divided into their component structures, dried and weighed. The quantity of dry weight allocated to sexual or vegetative reproduction was obtained by weighing the seeds, bulbils, or bulblets produced at the end of the season.
A. Victorialis ssp.platyphyllum showed a rather low reproductive effort. However, the mean seed output per plant was 34.8±16.8 and the productivity appeared very constant every season. Thus, in the natural populations young plants are borne and recruited every season by means of sexual reproduction.
A. monanthum was found to be characterized by annual type dry matter economy. The sexuality and reproductive systems of this species turned out to be extremely complex, and ten different reproductive types were distinguished. The exceedingly low efficiency of sexual reproduction in this species is apparently supplemented by vegetative propagation. The dry matter allocation to daughter bulbs at final harvest was very high; whereas the allocation to sexual reproduction was extremely low.
InA. Grayi (a polyploid complex of 4X, 5X, and 6X), a surprisingly high amount of the total annual net assimilate is allocated to the bulbils and bulblets. On the other hand, sexual reproductive effort in this species is exceedingly low, even in obligate amphimictic plants. Thus, the recruitment of individuals in a population of this species appears to be largely dependent on vegetative reproduction. Considering the number of bulbils produced in the scape heads, their dispersibility, germinability, and rapid growth after sprouting, the bulbils evidently possess a function almost comparable to seeds. This species no doubt possesses an adapative strategy to unstable, open habitats exposed to frequent disturbances.
It is concluded that the life history strategies of plants, as characterized here in this paper for three wildAllium species, have doubtlessly differentiated by adapting to the respective ecological backgrounds of their habitats.
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Kawano, S., Nagai, Y. The productive and reproductive biology of flowering plants. Bot. Mag. Tokyo 88, 281–318 (1975). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02488370
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02488370