Reproductive effort and sex allocation strategy in Commelina benghalensis L., a common monsoon weed |
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Authors: | VEENU KAUL NAMRATA SHARMA A. K. KOUL |
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Affiliation: | Department of Botany, University of Jammu, Jammu-180 006 (J &K), India |
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Abstract: | Commelina benghalensis L. exhibits variability in both foliar and floral features; every plant bears three types of branches and four types of flowers. The branches are negatively geotropic, positively geotropic and diageotropic. The flowers are uni- or bisexual, chasmogamous and cleistogamous. This variability influences the breeding system as well as resource allocation to male and female functions. The plants allocate c. 15% of their total resources to reproduction, the major part of which (68.9%) is devoted to production of aerial branches. The proportion of reproductive effort (RE) allocated to various branch systems is correlated with the availability of resources at the time of their differentiation. The pollen/ovule (P/O) ratio, female : male biomass ratio and reproductive output vary between different flower and branch types; variation is more pronounced in the latter. These variations notwithstanding, the results are in line with Charnov's sex allocation theory. The cleistogamous flowers of aerial branches are, however, an exception, being male- rather than female-biased. The reason behind the deviation is, in all probability, their recent evolution from chasmogamous flowers. © 2002 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society , 2002, 140 , 403−413. |
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Keywords: | breeding system chasmogamous cleistogamous female: male biomass ratio P/O ratio output sex allocation underground |
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