4.0 Article

No evidence for simultaneous pollen and resource limitation in Aciphylla squarrosa:: A long-lived, masting herb

Journal

AUSTRAL ECOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 370-377

Publisher

BLACKWELL PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1111/j.1442-9993.2007.01708.x

Keywords

Bateman's principle; Haig and Westoby model; masting; pollen limitation; resource limitation

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For successful reproduction animal pollinated plants must provide resources for both pollinator attraction and offspring production, and theory suggests that resources and pollen delivery limit reproduction simultaneously. We conducted a series of experiments involving supplemental pollination, flower removal, fertilizer addition and foliage removal to investigate the interaction of resources and pollen on fruit-set of Aciphylla squarrosa, a long-lived, dioecious, masting herb in Wellington, New Zealand. Reducing floral display decreased open-pollinated fruit-set, suggesting that display size is a reflection of an optimal investment between attraction and fecundity. In combination with supplemental pollination, resource reduction and fertilization addition did not alter fruit-set, suggesting that changes in resource availability did not limit reproduction in the current year. In addition, supplemental pollination of non-manipulated treatments did not increase fruit-set, demonstrating that plants were not naturally pollen limited. While we found that simultaneous pollen and resource limitation did not occur within a season, this is possibly mitigated by life history patterns including mast flowering and a storage taproot. Multiple year studies are required to further examine simultaneous resource and pollen limitation.

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