Extended flowering intervals of bamboos evolved by discrete multiplication |
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Authors: | Carl Veller Martin A. Nowak Charles C. Davis |
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Affiliation: | 1. Program for Evolutionary Dynamics, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA;2. Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA;3. Department of Mathematics, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA |
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Abstract: | Numerous bamboo species collectively flower and seed at dramatically extended, regular intervals – some as long as 120 years. These collective seed releases, termed ‘masts’, are thought to be a strategy to overwhelm seed predators or to maximise pollination rates. But why are the intervals so long, and how did they evolve? We propose a simple mathematical model that supports their evolution as a two‐step process: First, an initial phase in which a mostly annually flowering population synchronises onto a small multi‐year interval. Second, a phase of successive small multiplications of the initial synchronisation interval, resulting in the extraordinary intervals seen today. A prediction of the hypothesis is that mast intervals observed today should factorise into small prime numbers. Using a historical data set of bamboo flowering observations, we find strong evidence in favour of this prediction. Our hypothesis provides the first theoretical explanation for the mechanism underlying this remarkable phenomenon. |
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Keywords: | Bamboos biological clocks masting phenology |
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