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The cost of reproduction in Senecio keniodendron, a giant rosette species of Mt. Kenya. | LitMetric

The cost of reproduction in Senecio keniodendron, a giant rosette species of Mt. Kenya.

Oecologia

Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, 19104, Philadelphia, PA, USA.

Published: November 1982

AI Article Synopsis

  • A three-year study on Senecio keniodendron showed that reproducing individuals are more likely to die and have lower future reproduction rates compared to equivalent vegetative individuals.
  • If a reproducing individual survives and reproduces again, it produces more seeds in the second round due to the formation of lateral rosettes.
  • The study also found that slow-growing rosettes are less likely to reproduce, with size and leaf production rate before reproduction serving as good indicators of future seed production.

Article Abstract

A three year study of Senecio keniodendron (Compositae), a giant rosette species of the alpine zone of Mt. Kenya, demonstrated that individuals which reproduce are more likely to die, and less likely to reproduce in the future if they do survive, than are vegetative individuals of the same size. However, if an individual reproduces, survives and reproduces again, then it produces more seeds during the second reproductive episode than does a plant of the same height reproducing for the first time, because reproduction is followed by production of lateral rosettes, increasing the number of potentially-reproductive rosettes per plant.Slow-growing rosettes are less likely to reproduce than fast-growing rosettes. For rosettes which do reproduce, rosette size and rate of leaf production, measured before reproduction begins, are good predictors of fecundity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00384494DOI Listing

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