| Literature DB >> 28313059 |
Michele Ataroff1, Teresa Schwarzkopf1.
Abstract
Chamaedorea bartlingiana is a dioecious palm that grows in the cloud forest understories of the Venezuelan Andes. Age and sexual differences in phenology and reproductive patterns were studied in labelled individuals of all age categories. This species has long-lived leaves and low leaf production, both characteristic of understory plants. Growth rates are lower in juveniles than in adults and in females than in males, as in other palms. Male and female individuals show different reproductive patterns. Male inflorescences are always produced at the same rate and the probability of surviving until anthesis is constant. Females produce reproductive buds at the same rate as males, but these buds have a 35% probability of becoming a ripe infrutescence if the plant has infrutescences already growing, and 70% if it does not. This pattern and the slow growth of inflorescences (1 year for males from bud to flowers, 2 years for females from bud to ripe fruits) cause a pluriannual reproductive pattern at the population level. Field germination does not follow this pattern, but shows one annual peak probably related to environmental conditions.Keywords: Chamaedorea bartlingiana; Dioecy; Reproductive phenology; Seedlings; Vegetative phenology
Year: 1992 PMID: 28313059 DOI: 10.1007/BF00317372
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oecologia ISSN: 0029-8549 Impact factor: 3.225