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Seed weight increases with altitude in the Swiss Alps between related species but not among populations of individual species
Authors:Andrea?R.?Pluess  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:Andrea.Pluess@unibas.ch"   title="  Andrea.Pluess@unibas.ch"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author,Wolfgang?Schütz,Jürg?St?cklin
Affiliation:(1) Botanical Institute, University of Basel, Schoenbeinstrasse 6, 4056 Basel, Switzerland;(2) Present address: Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California Los Angeles, Warren Hall, Box 951786, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1786, USA
Abstract:Seed weight is a crucial plant life history trait, determining establishment success and dispersal ability. Especially in stressful environments, larger seeds may be selected at the expense of seed number, because larger seeds have a better chance of giving rise to an established offspring. We tested the hypotheses that between related species-pairs and among populations of single species a similar trend for increasing seed weight with increasing altitude should be present. Firstly, we measured seed weights from 29 species-pairs, with one species occurring in lowland areas and a congeneric species from high altitudes. Seeds of the alpine species were 28±8% larger than seeds from lowland species (P<0.01). Compared to the related lowland species, 55% of the alpine species had heavier seeds, 3% (one species) had lighter, and 41% had seeds of approximately equal weight. Secondly, we compared seed weights among populations of four species from different habitats and with different life histories. Seeds from between 11 and 34 populations per species were sampled along altitudinal gradients of 800–1,500 m (ca. 800 m in Scabiosa lucida, ca. 1,000 m in Saxifraga oppositifolia, ca. 1,000 m in Epilobium fleischeri, and ca. 1,500 m in Carex flacca). In all the four species, we found no indication for heavier seeds at higher altitudes. Our results indicate a selection pressure for species with heavier seeds at higher altitude, but the trend does not seem to operate across all cases. Phylogenetic constraints may limit the correlation among altitude and seed weight, operating particularly against selection for larger seed size, the closer populations and species are related to each other.
Keywords:Seed size   Carex flacca    Epilobium fleischeri    Saxifraga oppositifolia    Scabiosa lucida
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