The relationship between plant size and vegetative reproduction in clonal plants appears complex because vegetative expansion, growth, and reproduction are not clearly separable in such plants. In 'pseudo-annuals', which are clonal plants surviving the winter only as seeds and hibernacles produced b
Effects of size and growth rate on vegetative reproduction inTypha
β Scribed by James B. Grace; Robert G. Wetzel
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 423 KB
- Volume
- 50
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0029-8549
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β¦ Synopsis
The objective of this study was to separate the effects of plant biomass and growth rate on vegetative reproduction in two species of cat-tail, Typha latifolia and T. angustifolia. Replicate clones of both species were grown under conditions of 100%, 42%, 24%, and 9% full sunlight with harvests at 41, 70, and 91 days after shading. T. angustifolia produced most of its vegetative offspring before the first harvest and increased biomass over the remainder of the experiment by increasing the size of its ramets. In contrast, T. latifolia produced vegetative offspring gradually throughout the experiment adding new ramets only after existing clones were of mature size. As a result of these differences in the cloning process, T. angustifolia showed little correlation between vegetative reproduction and clone size while T. latifolia showed a strong correlation between gegetative reproduction and clone size at the three highest light intensities. Growth rates, average clone size and vegetative reproduction were all reduced by reductions in light intensity for both species. However, no effect of growth rate on the relationship between clone size and vegetative reproduction in T. latifolia could be detected. T. latifolia showed greater survivorship and more biomass production under 9% light than T. angustifolia indicating a greater shade tolerance.
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Weanling rats were fed a low-lithium diet (0.005-0.015 ppm) and the same diet supplemented with 0.5 ppm lithium. They were carried through three generations and observations made on growth rate, reproductive performance, and lithium concentration of tissues. Analyses were performed by flame emission