| Literature DB >> 27759040 |
Yong-Jian Wang1,2, Xue-Ping Shi1, Xiao-Jing Wu1, Xue-Feng Meng1, Peng-Cheng Wang1, Zhi-Xiang Zhou1, Fang-Li Luo2, Fei-Hai Yu2.
Abstract
The availabilities of light and soil water resources usually spatially co-vary in natural habitats, and the spatial pattern of such co-variation may affect the benefits of physiological integration between connected ramets of clonal plants. In a greenhouse experiment, we grew connected or disconnected ramet pairs [consisting of a proximal (relatively old) and a distal (relative young) ramet] of a rhizomatous herb Iris japonica in four heterogeneous environments differing in patch arrangement (reciprocal vs. parallel patchiness of light and soil water) and patch contrast (high vs. low contrast of light and water). Biomass of the proximal part, distal part and clonal fragment of I. japonica were all significantly greater in the intact than in the severed treatment, in the parallel than in the reciprocal patchiness treatment and in the high than in the low contrast treatment, but the effect of severing the connection between ramet pairs did not depend on patch arrangement or contrast. Severing the connection decreased number of ramets of the distal part and the clonal fragment in the parallel patchiness arrangement, but not in the reciprocal patchiness arrangement. Therefore, the spatial arrangement of resource patches can alter the effects of clonal integration on asexual reproduction in I. japonica.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27759040 PMCID: PMC5069692 DOI: 10.1038/srep35459
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Results of three-way ANOVAs for effects of patch arrangement (parallel vs. reciprocal patch), patch contrast (high vs. low) and rhizome severing (severed vs. intact) and their interactions on the growth of the whole clonal fragment (A), the proximal part (B) and the distal part (C) of Iris japonica.
| Arrangement (A) | Contrast (C) | Severing (S) | A × C | A × S | C × S | A × C × S | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (A) Clonal fragment | |||||||
| Biomass | 0.20ns | 1.53ns | 0.28ns | 0.34ns | |||
| No. of ramets | 2.70ns | 0.01ns | 0.76ns | 0.23ns | |||
| (B) Proximal part | |||||||
| Biomass | 1.80ns | 1.50ns | 1.66ns | 0.65ns | |||
| No. of ramets | 3.21ns | 1.51 | 1.10ns | 0.29ns | 0.29ns | 0.05ns | |
| (C) Distal part | |||||||
| Biomass | 0.34ns | 1.67ns | 2.89ns | 0.82ns | |||
| No. of ramets | 0.28ns | 3.52ns | 0.69ns | 0.47ns | |||
The given are F values and significance levels (***P < 0.001, **P < 0.01, *P < 0.05 and ns P ≥ 0.05). Degree of freedoms were 1, 64 for all the effects.
Figure 1Effects of patch arrangement (reciprocal vs. parallel), patch contrast (high vs. low) and rhizome severing (intact vs. severed) on the growth of the whole clonal fragment (proximal plus distal part) of I. japonica. Bars and vertical lines are mean and SE.
Figure 2Effects of patch arrangement (reciprocal vs. parallel), patch contrast (high vs. low) and rhizome severing (intact vs. severed) on the growth of the proximal part of I. japonica. Bars and vertical lines are mean and SE.
Figure 3Effects of patch arrangement (reciprocal vs. parallel), patch contrast (high vs. low) and rhizome severing (intact vs. severed) on the growth of the distal part of I. japonica. Bars and vertical lines are mean and SE.
Figure 4Experimental design.
The experiment used a factorial design with two rhizome severing treatments (intact vs. severed), two patch contrast treatments (high vs. low) and two patch arrangement treatments (reciprocal vs. parallel). In the high contrast treatment, the proximal ramet of a pair was subjected to the high water and/or high light treatment, while the distal ramet was subjected to the low water and/or low light treatment; in the low contrast treatment, the proximal ramet was subjected to the moderate water and/or moderate light treatment, while the distal ramet was subjected to the low water and/or low light treatment. In the parallel arrangement, high light was always accompanied with high water, moderate light with moderate water and low light with low water; in the reciprocal arrangement, high and moderate light were accompanied with low water and low light with high water or moderate water.