Title: | "Performance and allocation patterns of the perennial herb, Plantago lanceolata, in response to simulated herbivory and elevated CO(2) environments" |
Author(s): | Fajer ED; Bowers MD; Bazzaz FA; |
Address: | "Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, 16 Divinity Ave., 02138, Cambridge, MA, USA" |
ISSN/ISBN: | 1432-1939 (Electronic) 0029-8549 (Linking) |
Abstract: | "We tested the prediction that plants grown in elevated CO(2) environments are better able to compensate for biomass lost to herbivory than plants grown in ambient CO(2) environments. The herbaceous perennial Plantago lanceolata (Plantaginaceae) was grown in either near ambient (380 ppm) or enriched (700 ppm) CO(2) atmospheres, and then after 4 weeks, plants experienced either 1) no defoliation; 2) every fourth leaf removed by cutting; or 3) every other leaf removed by cutting. Plants were harvested at week 13 (9 weeks after simulated herbivory treatments). Vegetative and reproductive weights were compared, and seeds were counted, weighed, and germinated to assess viability.Plants grown in enriched CO(2) environments had significantly greater shoot weights, leaf areas, and root weights, yet had significantly lower reproductive weights (i.e. stalks + spikes + seeds) and produced fewer seeds, than plants grown in ambient CO(2) environments. Relative biomass allocation patterns further illustrated differences in plants grown in ambient CO(2) environments. Relative biomass allocation patterns further illustrated differences in plant responses to enriched CO(2) atmospheres: enriched CO(2)-grown plants only allocated 10% of their carbon resources to reproduction whereas ambient CO(2)-grown plants allocated over 20%. Effects of simulated herbivory on plant performance were much less dramatic than those induced by enriched CO(2) atmospheres. Leaf area removal did not reduce shoot weights or reproductive weights of plants in either CO(2) treatment relative to control plants. However, plants from both CO(2) treatments experienced reductions in root weights with leaf area removal, indicating that plants compensated for lost above-ground tissues, and maintained comparable levels of reproductive output and seed viability, at the expense of root growth" |
Keywords: | Allocation Compensatory growth Defoliation Reproductive effort Seed quality; |
Notes: | "PubMed-not-MEDLINEFajer, E D Bowers, M D Bazzaz, F A eng Germany 1991/06/01 Oecologia. 1991 Jun; 87(1):37-42. doi: 10.1007/BF00323777" |