The capture and gratuitous disposal of resources by plants

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Abstract

1. Every plant will die if light, water or nutrients are withheld for long enough. It is natural to think of plants in general as having evolved a strong drive for resource acquisition as a survival mechanism. All else being equal, an individual that sequesters more material from the environment than its neighbour must be at a competitive advantage. 2. But the resource capture imperative seems at odds with the profligacy of some characteristic developmental and metabolic processes in many plants. Here, using leaf senescence as a vantage point, we consider whether a kind of wilful inefficiency of resource use may not be essential for success as a terrestrial autotroph.

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Thomas, H., & Sadras, V. O. (2001). The capture and gratuitous disposal of resources by plants. Functional Ecology. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2435.2001.00488.x

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