𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Density-dependent regulation of ramet recruitment by the red:far-red ratio of solar radiation: a field evaluation with the bunchgrassSchizachyrium scoparium

✍ Scribed by J. S. Murphy; D. D. Briske


Book ID
104722752
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Weight
886 KB
Volume
97
Category
Article
ISSN
0029-8549

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Depressions in the red to far-red ratio (R:FR) of solar radiation arising from the selective absorption of R (600-700 nm) and scattering of FR (700-800 nm) by chlorophyll within plant canopies may function as an environmental signal directly regulating axillary bud growth and subsequent ramet recruitment in clonal plants. We tested this hypothesis in the field within a single cohort of parental ramets in established clones of the perennial bunchgrass, Schizachyrium scoparium. The R:FR was modified near leaf sheaths and axillary buds at the bases of individual ramets throughout the photoperiod without increasing photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) by either (1) supplementing R beneath canopies to raise the naturally low R:FR or (2) supplementing FR beneath partially defoliated canopies to suppress the natural R:FR increase following defoliation. Treatment responses were assessed by simultaneously monitoring ramet recruitment, PPFD and the R:FR beneath individual clone canopies at biweekly intervals over a 12-week period. Neither supplemental R nor FR influenced the rate or magnitude of ramet recruitment despite the occurrence of ramet recruitment in all experimental clones. In contrast, defoliation with or without supplemental FR beneath clone canopies reduced ramet recruitment 88% by the end of the experiment. The hypothesis stating that the R:FR signal directly regulates ramet recruitment is further weakened by evidence demonstrating that (1) the low R:FR-induced suppression of ramet recruitment is only one component of several architectural modifications exhibited by ramets in response to the R:FR signal (2) immature leaf blades, rather than leaf sheaths or buds, function as sites of R:FR perception on individual ramets, and (3) increases in the R:FR at clone bases following partial canopy removal are relatively transient and do not override the associated constraints on ramet recruitment resulting from defoliation. A depressed R:FR is probably of greater ecological significance as a signal of competition for light in vegetation canopies than as a density-dependent signal which directly regulates bud growth and ramet recruitment.