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1.
BMC Plant Biol ; 23(1): 474, 2023 Oct 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37807079

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Clonal plants can successfully adapt to various ecosystems. A trade-off between sexual and clonal reproduction is generally assumed in clonal plants, which may be influenced both by the characteristics of the plant itself and environmental conditions. Currently, it is unclear how climate change, and specifically warming and increased precipitation, might affect sexual and clonal reproduction in clonal plants. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate both the sexual and clonal reproduction responses of Stipa breviflora to warming and increased precipitation. A controlled experiment was conducted by inducing increases in precipitation (ambient condition, 25% and 50% increases) and warming (ambient temperature, 1.5 °C and 3.0 °C increases). RESULTS: Warming significantly influenced both the ratio of reproductive ramet shoot biomass to total shoot biomass, and the ratio of reproductive ramet number to total ramet number. Additionally, the ratio of reproductive ramet shoot biomass to total shoot biomass was also significantly affected by increased precipitation. Increased precipitation benefited sexual reproduction, while effects of warming on reproductive and/or vegetative ramets varied from negative to positive depending on precipitation conditions. There was no relationship between the number or shoot biomass of reproductive ramets and vegetative ramets. Reproductive ramets displayed greater sensitivity to climate change than vegetative ramets. CONCLUSIONS: The findings of our study suggest that there was no trade-off between sexual and clonal reproduction in S. breviflora. The combined impact of warming and increased precipitation promoted sexual reproduction but did not inhibit clonal reproduction. Clonal plants with the capacity for both sexual and clonal reproduction, may cope with climate change well via clonal reproduction, ensuring their survival.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Reprodução , Poaceae/fisiologia , Biomassa , Células Clonais
2.
Sci Total Environ ; 912: 169326, 2024 Feb 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38104804

RESUMO

Sexual reproduction is crucial for population continuity in clonal plants. The effect of nutrient translocation between ramets on sexual reproduction of clonal plants under nitrogen addition remains unclear. In this study, we focused on clonal fragments of Leymus chinensis reproductive ramets with different number of vegetative ramets connected to tillering nodes. A series of pot experiments was conducted under nitrogen addition, including 13C and 15N bidirectional labelling of vegetative ramets and reproductive ramets at the milk-ripe stage, determination of the 13C and 15N amount translocated, and assessment of the quantitative characteristics, nitrogen and carbon concentrations of reproductive ramets and vegetative ramets. Nitrogen addition promoted the translocation of 13C while inhibiting 15N between vegetative ramets and reproductive ramets. With an increase in the number of connected vegetative ramets, the 13C translocated by reproductive ramets and the 15N translocated by reproductive and vegetative ramets gradually increased. The translocation of 13C and 15N between vegetative and reproductive ramets was bidirectional and unequal. The translocated amount of 13C and 15N from reproductive ramets to vegetative ramets was always higher than that from vegetative ramets to reproductive ramets. Nitrogen addition did not prominently affect the sexual reproductive performance of L. chinensis, whereas the number of connected vegetative ramets both positively and negatively affected sexual reproductive performance. Ramet biomass is an important driver of nutrient acquisition by L. chinensis ramets. We demonstrate for the first time that unequal nutrient translocation between ramets affects sexual reproductive performance in L. chinensis. The findings contribute to an enhanced understanding of the reproductive strategies of clonal plant populations in future environments.


Assuntos
Nitrogênio , Poaceae , Carbono , Biomassa , Reprodução
3.
Front Plant Sci ; 11: 534278, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33193474

RESUMO

Sexual reproduction is vital for population adaptation in clonal plants. The flag leaf is considered to be the primary contributor to sexual reproduction in cereal crops, and there is no unified conclusion on the effect of the number of vegetative ramets on grain yield. However, what effects of the flag leaf and the number of vegetative ramets on sexual reproductive performance of clonal grasses are largely unknown. To test this, under field natural conditions, we grew the rhizomatous grass Leymus chinensis in a homogeneous environment and conducted studies concerning the growth, reproduction and physiology of reproductive ramets in clonal populations. We measured the growth characteristics of different aged leaves, dynamically measured the net photosynthetic rate of different aged leaves and organ biomass, measured the sexual reproductive characteristics of reproductive ramets that had different numbers of connecting vegetative ramets, and performed isotope (15N) labeling of ramet pairs at the seed-filling stage. In L. chinensis clonal populations, from the heading stage, the photosynthetic contribution of the functional leaves to seed production was much greater than that of the flag leaf; the photosynthetic capacity of both the functional leaves and the flag leaf all gradually declined. Vegetative ramets translocated their own resources to the connected reproductive ramets, and a large proportion of translocated resources were allocated to the leaf and stem to sustain life activities; increase in the number of connecting vegetative ramets increased floret number, seed number, seed-setting rate, inflorescence biomass, seed biomass, and reproductive allocation of reproductive ramets, and these parameters significantly and positively correlated with the biomass of connecting vegetative ramets. We conclude that the functional leaf rather than the flag leaf of L. chinensis is the primary contributor to seed production. Reproductive ramets adopt a strategy of growth first and reproduction later to allocate the translocated resources between the organs, but vegetative ramets are very advantageous for sexual reproduction under the tillering node connection form in L. chinensis. Overall, our study implies that vegetative ramets not only play an important role in the spatial expansion but also in the sexual reproduction of clonal plant populations.

4.
Plants (Basel) ; 9(11)2020 Nov 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33228108

RESUMO

Clonal plants usually reproduce asexually through vegetative propagation and sexually by producing seeds. Physiological integration, the translocation of essential resources between ramets, usually improves vegetative reproduction. However, how physiological integration affects sexual reproduction has been less studied in clonal grasses. Here, we chose Hierochloe glabra, a major early spring forage of the eastern Eurasian steppe, and conducted a series of field experiments, including sampling reproductive ramets connected by tillering nodes to different numbers of vegetative ramets and 15N leaf labeling of ramet pairs at the seed-filling stage. In the natural populations of H. glabra, vegetative ramets were taller, had more and larger leaves, and greater biomass than reproductive ramets. Except for reproductive ramet biomass, sexual reproductive characteristics significantly increased with an increase in the number and biomass of vegetative ramets connected to tillering nodes. 15N labeling showed that vegetative ramets supplied nutrients to reproductive ramets through tillering nodes. Overall, our results indicate that significant differences in morphological characteristics and biomass allocation underlie resources translocation from vegetative ramets towards reproductive ramets. Physiological integration between different functional ramets can increase sexual reproductive performance, which will be beneficial to population persistence in H. glabra.

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