Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/15793
Título: Prezygotic resource-allocation dynamics and reproductive trade-offs in calymperaceae (Bryophyta)
Autor: Pereira, Marta Regina Silva
Sales Dambros, Cristian de
Zartman, Charles Eugene
Palavras-chave: Gamete
Moss
Propagule
Rainforest
Reproductive Behavior
Resource Allocation
Senescence
Sporophyte
Survivorship
Trade-off
Amazonia
Bryophyta
Calymperaceae
Reproduction, Asexual
Bryopsida
Evolution
Physiology
Rainforest
Reproduction
Season
Species Difference
Biological Evolution
Bryopsida
Rainforest
Reproduction
Reproduction, Asexual
Seasons
Species Specificity
Data do documento: 2016
Revista: American Journal of Botany
É parte de: Volume 103, Número 10, Pags. 1838-1846
Abstract: PREMISE OF THE STUDY: Resource allocation is difficult to characterize in plants because of the challenges of quantifying gametes and propagules. We surveyed six sympatric, unisexual species in the family Calymperaceae (Bryophyta) to test for trade-offs in prezygotic sexual and asexual expression and density-dependent survivorship of female gametangia. METHODS: We tallied gametangial and asexual propagule output for 1820 shoots from 17 populations of six species at monthly intervals during one year (2010–2011) in a central Amazonian forest. Generalized linear mixed models were used to test for trade-offs in sexual and asexual expression and density-dependent senescence probability of gametangia. Precipitation and microsite variables were also included in the model. KEY RESULTS: For all species, sexual and asexual expression were positively correlated with mean monthly precipitation. Asexually expressing shoots produced significantly fewer gametangia than nonexpressing ones, and the probability of senescence increased with shoot density. Archegonium density per shoot was also consistently lower than the modeled optimum to maximize the number of receptive archegonia. CONCLUSIONS: Trade-offs among reproductive strategies and positive density-dependent senescence of female gametangia suggest that prezygotic sexual and asexual expression come at a tangible investment. However, the apparently inefficient resource-allocation dynamics in the production of female gametangia makes the possible advantages of squandering such investments unclear. One possibility is that the study populations, like those of many dioicous mosses, are skewed toward expressing females with low sporophyte production, which would suggest that asexual reproduction predominates and upstages efficient resource allocation in prezygotic investment. © 2016 Botanical Society of America.
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.1600240
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