4.6 Article

Does masting scale with plant size? High reproductive variability and low synchrony in small and unproductive individuals

Journal

ANNALS OF BOTANY
Volume 126, Issue 5, Pages 971-979

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcaa118

Keywords

Fecundity; mast seeding; plant reproduction; predator satiation; seed predation; super-producers

Categories

Funding

  1. Polish National Science Centre [2017/24/C/NZ8/00151]
  2. Polish State Committee for Scientific Research [6 P04G 045 21, 3 P04G 111 25]
  3. Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education [N304 362938]
  4. US National Science Foundation [DEB 165511, DEB-02-40963, DEB-05-15756, DEB-10-20889, DBI-9978807, DEB-0642594, DEB-1556707]
  5. Wilkes University Fenner Endowment
  6. USDA/NIFA [2017-03807]
  7. Hatch Act through the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture [225165, CC-16-095, AGL-2017-83828-C2, CGL2015-70558-P, SGR913, UOC1401]

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Background and Aims In a range of plant species, the distribution of individual mean fecundity is skewed and dominated by a few highly fecund individuals. Larger plants produce greater seed crops, but the exact nature of the relationship between size and reproductive patterns is poorly understood. This is especially clear in plants that reproduce by exhibiting synchronized quasi-periodic variation in fruit production, a process called masting. Methods We investigated covariation of plant size and fecundity with individual-plant-level masting patterns and seed predation in 12 mast-seeding species: Pinus pinea, Astragalus scaphoides, So rbus aucuparia, Querrus ilex. Q. humilis, Q. nibm, Q. alba, Q. montana, Chionochloa pallens, C. macro, Celmisia lyallii and Phormium tenax. Key Results Fecundity was non-linearly related to masting patterns. Small and unproductive plants frequently failed to produce any seeds, which elevated their annual variation and decreased synchrony. Above a low fecundity threshold. plants had similar variability and synchrony, regardless of their size and productivity. Conclusions Our study shows that within-species variation in masting patterns is correlated with variation in fecundity. which in turn is related to plant size. Low synchrony of low-fertility plants shows that the failure years were idiosyncratic to each small plant, which in turn implies that the small plants fail to reproduce because of plant-specific factors (e.g. internal resource limits). Thus, the behaviour of these sub-producers is apparently the result of trade-offs in resource allocation and environmental limits with which the small plants cannot cope. Plant size and especially fecundity and propensity for mast failure years play a major role in determining the variability and synchrony of reproduction in plants.

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