Measured the effect of early reproduction on subsequent growth and survival in the alpine perennial wildflower, Polemonium viscosum. A significant phenotypic cost of early reproduction characterized the study population. Plants that flowered after only one year's growth had twice as many leaves and 25% more shoots than nonflowering individuals of equal age. However, early flowering decreased leaf number by 18% in the subsequent year and survivorship by 20% after two years relative to changes in leaf number and survival of nonflowering plants. For such trade-offs to shape the further evolution of reproductive schedules, flowering probability and those age-specific components of plant size that represent the energetic currency for reproductive costs must be heritable. Although families showed significant heterogeneity in the probability of early flowering, most (62%) entirely failed to flower. Moreover, phenotypic variation in vegetative size components at ages 1 and 2 had little genetic basis. Only at ages 3 and 4, after vegetative and demographic costs of early reproduction had been incurred, did vegetative size components (leaf length and number, and shoot number) vary significantly among families. -from Author
CITATION STYLE
Galen, C. (1993). Cost of reproduction in Polemonium viscosum: phenotypic and genetic approaches. Evolution, 47(4), 1073–1079. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.1993.tb02136.x
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