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Aquatic plant shows flexible avoidance by escape from tuber predation by swans
Authors:Bert Hidding  Marcel Klaassen  Thijs de Boer  Peter P de Vries  Bart A Nolet
Institution:1. Department of Environmental Studies, University of the Aegean, GR 81100 Mytilini, Greece;2. Hellenic Agricultural Organization “DEMETER”, Forest Research Institute, GR 57006, Vassilika, Thessaloniki, Greece;1. Department of Environmental Engineering, Toyama Prefectural University, 5180 Kurokawa, Imizu-shi, Toyama 939-0398, Japan;2. Institute of Mountain Science, Shinshu University, Kogandori 5-2-4, Suwa, Nagano 392-0027, Japan;3. Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, Kyung Hee University, Yongin 446-701, Republic of Korea;4. Department of Biological Sciences, Pusan National University, Busan 609-735, Republic of Korea;5. Department of Physical & Environmental Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M1C-1A4, Canada;1. Department of Biology and Marine Biology, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, NC 28403-5915, United States;2. Center for Marine Science, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, NC 28403-5928, United States;3. Division of Natural Sciences and Engineering, University of South Carolina Upstate, 800 University Way, Spartanburg, SC 29303, United States
Abstract:Deeper burial of bulbs and tubers has been suggested as an escape against below-ground herbivory by vertebrates, but experimental evidence is lacking. As deep propagule burial can incur high costs of emergence after dormancy, burial depth may represent a trade-off between sprouting survival and herbivore avoidance. We tested whether burial depth of subterraneous tubers is a flexible trait in fennel pondweed (Potamogeton pectinatus), facing tuber predation by Bewick's swans (Cygnus columbianus bewickii) in shallow lakes in winter. In a four-year experiment involving eight exclosures, winter herbivory by swans and all vertebrate summer herbivory were excluded in a full-factorial design; we hence controlled for aboveground vertebrate herbivory in summer, possibly influencing tuber depth. Tuber depth was measured each September before swan arrival and each March before tuber sprouting. In accordance with our hypothesis, tuber depth in September decreased after excluding Bewick's swans in comparison to control plots. The summer exclosure showed an increase in tuber biomass and the number of shallow tubers, but not a significant effect on the mean burial depth of tuber mass. Our results suggest that a clonal plant like P. pectinatus can tune the tuber burial depth to predation pressure, either by phenotypic plasticity or genotype sorting, hence exhibiting flexible avoidance by escape. We suggest that a flexible propagule burial depth can be an effective herbivore avoidance strategy, which might be more widespread among tuber forming plant species than previously thought.
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