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VARIATION IN POPULATION GROWTH RATE IN THE WOODLAND ANNUAL IMPATIENS PALLIDA (BALSAMINACEAE)
Authors:Carmen R. Cid-Benevento  Barbara A. Schaal
Affiliation:W. K. Kellogg Biological Station and Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Michigan State University, Hickory Corners, Michigan, 49060

Department of Biology, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, 63130

Abstract:Variation in population growth rate over environmental gradients was determined for the annual Impatiens pallida (Balsaminaceae), by monitoring age- and size-specific survivorship and fecundity in five populations of this summer-flowering and primarily woodland species. All I. pallida seedlings emerged within a few days of each other and a size hierarchy was established within a month, and remained unchanged thereafter. Light and initial seedling density together explained 67% of the variance in mean adult plant size. As a result of differences among populations in the amount of disturbance, survivorship to the time of floral bud production ranged from 39% to 93% of the initial seedling total. Survivorship during the reproductive period was most affected by plant size and soil moisture. For plants surviving to flowering time, the probability of setting seed, the type of seed and the number of seeds produced per plant were significantly positively correlated with plant size. More than 82% of all seeds were produced by plants greater than or 1 m tall. Cleistogamy was the major form of reproduction in 4 out of 5 populations monitored. The net reproductive rate (R0) differed greatly among populations, ranging from 1.23 to 16.27. Population growth rate increased with increasing resource availability and decreasing disturbance during the growing season. The magnitude of R0 depended primarily on 1) timing, intensity and frequency of disturbance, 2) length of the reproductive period, and 3) population size structure.
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