INVESTIGADORES
ECHARTE Laura
artículos
Título:
The Allometry of Reproduction within Plant Populations
Autor/es:
WEINER, J.; L. G. CAMPBELL; J. PINO, ; L. ECHARTE
Revista:
JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY (PRINT)
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Año: 2009 vol. 97 p. 1220 - 1233
ISSN:
0022-0477
Resumen:
1. The quantitative relationship between size and reproductive output is a central aspect of a
plants strategy: the conversion of growth into fitness. As plant allocation is allometric in the broad
sense, i.e. it changes with size, we take an allometric perspective and review existing data on the
relationship between individual vegetative (V, x-axis) and reproductive (R, y-axis) biomass within
plant populations, rather than analysing biomass ratios such as reproductive effort (R⁄ (R+V)).
2. The allometric relationship between R and V among individuals within a population is most
informative when cumulative at senescence (total RV relationship), as this represents the
potential reproductive output of individuals given their biomass. Earlier measurements may be
misleading if plants are at different developmental stages and therefore have not achieved
the full reproductive output their size permits. Much of the data that have been considered
evidence for plasticity in reproductive allometry are actually evidence for plasticity in the rate
of growth and development.
3. Although a positive x-intercept implies a minimum size for reproducing, a plant can have a
threshold size for reproducing without having a positive x-intercept.
4. Most of the available data are for annual and monocarpic species whereas allometric data on
long-lived iteroparous plants are scarce. We find three common total RV patterns: short-lived, herbaceous
plants and clonal plants usually show a simple, linear relationship, either (i) passing
through the origin or (ii) with a positive x-intercept, whereas larger and longer-lived plants often
exhibit (iii) classical loglog allometric relationships with slope <1. While the determinants of plant
size are numerous and interact with one another, the potential reproductive output of an individual
is primarily determined by its size and allometric programme, although this potential is not always
achieved.
5. Synthesis. The total RV relationship for a genotype appears to be a relatively fixed-boundary
condition. Below this boundary, a plant can increase its reproductive output by: (i) moving towards
the boundary: allocating more of its resources to reproduction, or (ii) growing more to increase its
potential reproductive output. At the boundary, the plant cannot increase its reproductive output
without growing more first. Analysing size-dependent reproduction is the first step in understanding
plant reproductive allocation, but more integrative models must include time and environmental
cues, i.e. development.