Variation in reproductive characteristics of Poa pratensis across a successional chronosequenc

Document Type

Journal article

Source Publication

Texas journal of science

Publication Date

2-1994

Volume

45

Issue

1

First Page

107

Last Page

108

Publisher

Texas Academy of Science

Abstract

Many aspects of reproductive behavior of plants are plastic and can vary greatly among individuals of the same species living in different habitats. The number of seeds produced by a plant is generally more plastic than the mean individual seed mass (Harper et al., 1970), although the size of individual seeds has been observed to be influenced by environmental factors such as light, temperature, soil nutrients, and level of competition (reviewed in McGinley et al., 1987; McGinley and Charnov, 1988). Because both biotic and abiotic conditions change during secondary succession, the reproductive behavior of a species may differ among successional stages. Here I report on the effect of successional stage on the number of seeds, the total mass of seeds, and the mean individual seed mass produced by individuals of the introduced grass Poa pratensis at Cedar Creek Natural History Area in Minnesota. Soil nutrient availability and plant biomass increase over time, whereas light availability decreases over time during secondary succession at this site (Inouye et al., 1987). Because Poa pratensis colonizes fields rapidly, reaches its greatest proportional abundance in intermediate-aged fields, and remains abundant in the oldest fields at this site, it is an important species in all stages of secondary succession at Cedar Creek (Tilman, 1988).

Print ISSN

00404403

Publisher Statement

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Full-text Version

Publisher’s Version

Language

English

Recommended Citation

McGinley, M. A. (1994). Variation in reproductive characteristics of Poa pratensis across a successional chronosequenc. Texas journal of science, 45(1), 107-108.

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