Blandino, Cristina Fernández-Pascual, Eduardo Newton, Rosemary J Pritchard, Hugh W
Published in
Annals of botany
European ancient woodlands are subject to land use change, and the distribution of herbaceous understorey species may be threatened because of their poor ability to colonize isolated forest patches. The regeneration niche can determine the species assembly of a community, and seed germination traits may be important descriptors of this niche. We an...
Valenta, Kim Nevo, Omer
Published in
Annals of botany
Rojas, Tobias Nicolas Zampini, Iris Catiana Isla, María Inés Blendinger, Pedro G
Published in
Annals of botany
Fruit traits and their inter-relationships can affect foraging choices by frugivores, and hence the probability of mutualistic interactions. Certain combinations of fruit traits that determine the interaction with specific seed dispersers are known as dispersal syndromes. The dispersal syndrome hypothesis (DSH) states that seed dispersers influence...
Herting, Julian Stützel, Thomas
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Annals of botany
The Florin model is the commonly accepted theory of coniferous seed scale evolution. It describes the derivation of extant seed scale morphology from the morphology of fossil conifers via the reduction of complex to simple axillary structures. In this framework the seed scale is composed of a reduced lateral shoot with fertile and sterile appendage...
Orsucci, Marion Yang, Xuyue Vanikiotis, Theofilos Guerrina, Maria Duan, Tianlin Lascoux, Martin Glémin, Sylvain
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Annals of botany
Self-fertilization is often associated with ecological traits corresponding to the ruderal strategy, and selfers are expected to be less competitive than outcrossers, either because of a colonization/competition trade-off or because of the deleterious genetic effects of selfing. Range expansion could reduce further competitive ability while polyplo...
Gorné, Lucas D Díaz, Sandra Minden, Vanessa Onoda, Yusuke Kramer, Koen Muir, Christopher Michaletz, Sean T Lavorel, Sandra Sharpe, Joanne Jansen, Steven
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Annals of botany
The acquisitive-conservative axis of plant ecological strategies results in a pattern of leaf trait covariation that captures the balance between leaf construction costs and plant growth potential. Studies evaluating trait covariation within species are scarcer, and have mostly dealt with variation in response to environmental gradients. Little wor...
Giesemann, Philipp Gebauer, Gerhard
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Annals of botany
Previous carbon stable isotope (13C) analyses have shown for very few C3-hemiparasites utilizing C4- or CAM-hosts the use of two carbon sources, autotrophy and heterotrophy. This 13C approach, however, failed for the frequently occurring C3-C3 parasite-host pairs. Thus, we used hydrogen stable isotope (2H) natural abundances as a substitute for 13C...
Lefebvre, Théodore Charles-Dominique, Tristan Tomlinson, Kyle W
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Annals of botany
The defensive role of spines has previously been related to leaves, young shoots and reproductive organs. However, some woody species harbour spines on their trunks where none of those organs are present. Several explanations are plausible: they could be (1) climbing aids, (2) remnants from defence of leaves or reproductive organs during an earlier...
Suissa, Jacob S
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Annals of botany
The sensitive fern, Onoclea sensibilis, is a widespread species in eastern North America and has an atypical timing of spore dispersal among temperate ferns. During early summer, this dimorphic species produces heavily modified spore-bearing fronds with leaflets tightly enveloping their sporangia and spores. These fronds senesce and persist above g...
Wang, Luwei Ding, Junyi Borrell, James S Cheek, Martin McAllister, Hugh A Wang, Feifei Liu, Lu Zhang, Huayu Zhang, Qiufeng Wang, Yiming
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Annals of botany
Delineating closely related and morphologically similar species is difficult. Here, we integrate morphology, genetics, ploidy and geography to resolve species and subspecies boundaries in four trees of section Costatae (genus Betula): Betula ashburneri, B. costata, B. ermanii and B. utilis, as well as multiple subspecies and polyploid races. We gen...