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Volume 91, Issue 2
Article

Longitudinal analysis of Plantago: adaptive benefits of iteroparity in a short‐lived, herbaceous perennial

Richard P. Shefferson

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: dormancy@gmail.com

 Present address: University of Georgia, Odum School of Ecology, 140 E. Green Street, Athens, Georgia 30602 USA. E-mail: E-mail address: dormancy@gmail.comSearch for more papers by this author
Deborah A. Roach

Department of Biology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904 USA

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First published: 01 February 2010
Citations: 8

Corresponding Editor: J. Weiner.

Abstract

Theory suggests that iteroparity may confer greater fitness than semelparity in situations in which temporal environmental variation is high and unpredictable. Variable age‐specific mortality, density dependence, and other factors may also favor iteroparity over semelparity. Here, we empirically test the adaptive benefits of greater numbers of reproductive years in a study of reproductive schedules in an experimental population of a short‐lived polycarpic perennial, Plantago lanceolata. A large experimental population was established that included four cohorts with similar genetic structure. Individuals were censused for mortality, size, and reproduction for seven years. Plants experienced variable numbers of reproductive years, but one or two years were most common (∼46.7% of the population reproduced only once). The probability of flowering at least once prior to death was determined strongly by extrinsic, environmental or intrinsic but environmentally influenced variables, including early‐life size, cohort, and block, but also varied with a number of interactions involving paternal lineage. Maternal effects explained small but significant components of the variance in the number of reproductive years among individuals in each cohort, while paternal effects were significant in only two cohorts. Number of reproductive years contributed significantly to fitness in this system, more so than all other variables tested, although most of the variation in relative fitness may be attributed ultimately to environmental influences. We suggest that the high proportion of each cohort composed of plants reproducing only once may be due to environmental constraints on either growth or size. Such environmental influences, particularly on early life size, may result in small but important indirect effects on fitness.

Number of times cited according to CrossRef: 8

  • The demography of terrestrial orchids: life history, population dynamics and conservation, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 10.1093/botlinnean/boz084, (2019).
  • Plant and herbivore ontogeny interact to shape the preference, performance and chemical defense of a specialist herbivore, Oecologia, 10.1007/s00442-018-4068-8, 187, 2, (401-412), (2018).
  • Understanding the importance of intrapopulation functional variability and phenotypic plasticity in Quercus suber, Tree Genetics & Genomes, 10.1007/s11295-015-0856-z, 11, 3, (2015).
  • Time is of the essence: direct and indirect effects of plant ontogenetic trajectories on higher trophic levels, Ecology, 10.1890/13-2249.1, 95, 9, (2589-2602), (2014).
  • Age, growth and size interact with stress to determine life span and mortality, Experimental Gerontology, 10.1016/j.exger.2012.05.020, 47, 10, (782-786), (2012).
  • The triple helix of : Genetics and the environment interact to determine population dynamics, Ecology, 10.1890/11-0742.1, 93, 4, (793-802), (2012).
  • Agronomic Assessment of Perennial Wheat and Perennial Rye as Cereal Crops, Agronomy Journal, 10.2134/agronj2012.0291, 104, 6, (1716-1726), (2012).
  • Plant Induced Defenses Depend More on Plant Age than Previous History of Damage: Implications for Plant-Herbivore Interactions, Journal of Chemical Ecology, 10.1007/s10886-011-0007-4, 37, 9, (992-1001), (2011).