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American Journal of Botany, Vol 84, 1279, Copyright © 1997 by Botanical Society of America, Inc.
POPULATION BIOLOGY |
ML Ronsheim
Local adaptation within and among populations may have an impact on processes ranging from speciation to the evolution of mixed breeding systems and dispersal strategies. It is also one potential factor that could favor the production of asexual over sexual propagules. This field experiment tested whether asexually produced bulbils of Allium vineale demonstrate local adaptation to the parental microsite at the scale of natural dispersal from the parent (5, 25, 50, 100, and 1000 cm). Both "home'' and randomly chosen "away'' genotypes were planted at each location to determine the relative performance of the "home'' genotype. Overall, bulbil performance declined with distance from the parent. In particular, "home'' bulbils outperformed "away'' bulbils at a distance of 25 cm from the parent, indicating that local adaptation has occurred at the scale of natural dispersal in this species. The variance in propagule performance also increased at farther distances from the parent, indicating that the predictability of offspring performance decreases with distance. Fine-scale local adaptation within the range of seed dispersal in this population may be one factor favoring asexual reproduction in Allium vineale.
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