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(American Journal of Botany. 1999;86:1264-1271.)
© 1999 Botanical Society of America, Inc.

Short-term effects of fire and competition on growth and plasticity of the yellow pitcher plant, Sarracenia alata (Sarraceniaceae)1

J. Stephen Brewer

Department of Biology, University of Mississippi, University, Mississippi 38677

Although recurrent fires are widely assumed to reduce competitive interference of plants of pine savannas, rarely has this assumption been tested explicitly. This 2-yr study reports on the interactive effects of fire and neighbors on short-term growth responses and plasticity in allocation patterns of a carnivorous plant, the yellow pitcher plant, Sarracenia alata. This species relies upon pitfall traps (pitchers) to attract and capture insects to obtain nutrients. Neighbors reduced the growth rate of individual ramet transplants (phytometers) in one but not both years of the study. The effect of neighbors on total (i.e., both above- and belowground) productivity of phytometers was not reduced by a winter fire. Neighbors had a greater effect on large plants than on small plants. Although fire did not affect the growth rate of phytometers in the short term, allocation patterns were greatly altered by both neighbors and fire. Allocation to pitchers increased at the expense of belowground organs following fire and in the absence of neighbors at the unburned site. Results of the current study suggest that adult pitcher plants may tolerate competition from neighboring vegetation by reducing allocation to costly pitchers during years without fire.

Key Words: allocation • carnivorous plants • competition • fire • phenotypic plasticity • Sarracenia alata • Sarraceniaceae




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J. S. Brewer
A demographic analysis of fire-stimulated seedling establishment of Sarracenia alata (Sarraceniaceae)
Am. J. Botany, July 1, 2001; 88(7): 1250 - 1257.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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