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INTRA- AND INTERCLONAL COMPETITION IN THE CLEISTOGAMOUS GRASS AMPHIBROMUS SCABRIVALVIS
Authors:Gregory P. Cheplick  Gema M. Salvadori
Affiliation:Department of Biology, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, Whitewater, Wisconsin, 53190
Abstract:The relationship of differences in life history traits among genotypes to competitive ability is not well known for most clonal plants. It has been hypothesized that genetically identical clones will compete more intensively than genetically distinct clones. The perennial grass Amphibromus scabrivalvis, which produces basal corms and cleistogamous seeds enclosed by leaf sheaths, exhibits pronounced clonal growth via rhizome and ramet production. In a controlled greenhouse experiment, clones of four genotypes of this species were grown under three regimes: alone in the absence of competition, paired with a clone of the same genotype (intraclonal competition), and paired with a clone of a different genotype (interclonal competition). There were differences in some biomass measures and in ramet and corm production among the four genotypes grown in the absence of competition. All genotypes showed a significant reduction in total biomass under both intra- and interclonal conditions, indicating that competition had occurred. For three of four genotypes, biomass allocation to corm increased under competition, while allocation to cleistogamous seeds was constant or increased slightly. Although some genotypes in specific interclonal combinations were less affected by competition than in intraclonal combinations, there was no support for the contention that the effects of competition were more intense for genetically identical clones.
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