| Literature DB >> 27449602 |
Tomoyuki Abe1, Yuuya Tachiki2, Hirokazu Kon1, Akiko Nagasaka1, Kensuke Onodera1, Kazuhiro Minamino1, Qingmin Han3, Akiko Satake2.
Abstract
Synchronised and fluctuating reproduction by plant populations, called masting, is widespread in diverse taxonomic groups. Here, we propose a new method to explore the proximate mechanism of masting by combining spatiotemporal flowering data, biochemical analysis of resource allocation and mathematical modelling. Flowering data of 170 trees over 13 years showed the emergence of clustering with trees in a given cluster mutually synchronised in reproduction, which was successfully explained by resource budget models. Analysis of resources invested in the development of reproductive organs showed that parametric values used in the model are significantly different between nitrogen and carbon. Using a fully parameterised model, we showed that the observed flowering pattern is explained only when the interplay between nitrogen dynamics and climatic cues was considered. This result indicates that our approach successfully identified resource type-specific roles on masting and that the method is suitable for a wide range of plant species.Entities:
Keywords: Carbon; Fagus crenata; climatic cue; clustering; mast seeding; nitrogen; pollen coupling; reproduction; resource allocation; synchrony
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27449602 DOI: 10.1111/ele.12651
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecol Lett ISSN: 1461-023X Impact factor: 9.492