4.5 Article

BUD PRODUCTION AND DYNAMICS OF FLOWERING AND VEGETATIVE TILLERS IN ANDROPOGON GERARDII (POACEAE): THE ROLE OF DEVELOPMENTAL CONSTRAINTS

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
Volume 98, Issue 8, Pages 1293-1298

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.1000264

Keywords

allocation; axillary bud; bud bank; meristem; ontogeny; tiller recruitment; tradeoff; vegetative reproduction; perennial grass

Categories

Funding

  1. Kansas State University Division of Biology
  2. Konza Prairie Long-Term Ecological Research Program
  3. USDA [310306]

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Premise of the Study: Perennial grasses maintain aboveground tiller populations through vegetative reproduction via belowground buds and sexual reproduction via seed. The maintenance of a bud bank has important demographic consequences for perennial grasses. A tradeoff between these reproductive modes would be expected for a plant with limited resource availability. However, the ontogeny of the tiller could affect its ability to allocate between these two modes of reproduction. Methods: Vegetative bud production and dynamics and tiller production were examined biweekly through an annual cycle on vegetative and flowering tillers of Andropogon gerardii. Key Results: Andropogon gerardii maintains a large reserve of dormant buds. Although vegetative and flowering tillers had similar bud phenology, flowering tillers produced larger numbers of buds of larger size, and transitioned a larger proportion of their buds to tiller, than did vegetative tillers. Therefore, a negative consequence of sexual reproduction on vegetative reproduction was not evident at the tiller level. A size threshold for floral induction likely exists that results in flowering tillers having more buds per tiller than vegetative tillers. The increased bud outgrowth of flowering tillers could be a result of their larger bud size or weaker apical dominance as compared to vegetative tillers. Conclusions: Plant development can place significant constraints on tradeoffs between the reproductive modes in perennial grasses and could affect their plasticity in plant reproductive allocation. Differences in developmental phenology and bud production between flowering and vegetative tillers may influence grass responses to environmental changes such as altered precipitation regimes or resource availability.

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