4.4 Article

Seed germination in desert annuals: An empirical test of adaptive bet hedging

Journal

AMERICAN NATURALIST
Volume 155, Issue 2, Pages 168-186

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/303314

Keywords

desert annual plant; bet hedging; phenotypic plasticity; seed germination; variable environments; life history

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Temporal variability in survivorship and reproduction is predicted to affect the evolution of life-history characters. Desert annual plants experience temporal variation in reproductive success that is largely caused by precipitation variability We studied several populations of the desert annual Plantago insularis is along a precipitation gradient. Whereas models of bet hedging in unpredictable environments generally predict one optimal germination fraction for a population, empirical studies have shown that environmental conditions during germination can cause a range of germination fractions to br expressed. In a 4-yr field study, we found that populations in historically more xeric environments had lower mean germination fractions, as is predicted by bet-hedging models. However, populations exhibited significant variation in germination among years. Two experimental studies measuring germination under several environment conditions were conducted to elucidate the source of this in situ variation. Germination fractions exhibited phenotypic plasticity in response to water availability and date within the season. Populations differed in their norms of reaction such that seeds from more xeric populations germinated under less restrictive conditions. A pattern of delayed germination consistent with among-year bet-hedging predictions arose in the field through the interaction of seed germinability and the distribution of environmental conditions during germination.

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