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(American Journal of Botany. 2000;87:1769-1777.)
© 2000 Botanical Society of America, Inc.

Genetic variation and evolutionary trade-offs for sexual and asexual reproductive modes in Allium vineale (Liliaceae)1

Margaret L. Ronsheim3,2 and James D. Bever5,4

2 Department of Biology, Box 513, Vassar College, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie, New York 12604-0513 USA; and 4 Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405 USA

Populations of Allium vineale commonly include individuals with very different allocation patterns to three modes of reproduction: sexual flowers, aerially produced asexual bulbils, and belowground asexual offsets. If selection is currently acting to maintain these different allocation patterns there must be a genetic basis for variation in allocation to these three reproductive modes. In addition, negative genetic correlations between reproductive traits would imply evolutionary trade-offs among reproductive strategies. We evaluated the heritability of these allocation patterns by growing 16 clones from a single population in the greenhouse at two levels of fertilization. Bulb mass and the mass and number of bulbils, offsets, and flowers were used as response variables, in addition to the proportion allocated to each reproductive mode. We found evidence of substantial heritable variation in allocation to sexual reproduction and in allocation within the two modes of asexual reproduction, indicating high sensitivity of these allocation patterns to natural selection. We also found evidence of strong negative genetic correlations between bulbil and flower traits, as well as between bulbil and offset traits, with one group of genotypes allocating greater resources to aerial asexual bulbils and the second group allocating more resources to belowground asexual offsets and aerial flowers. Phenotypic plasticity in allocation to above- vs. belowground asexual reproduction and sexual vs. asexual aerial reproduction was limited, indicating that plants are unlikely to change reproductive mode in response to nutrient availability. Together, then, we have demonstrated strong heritability for, and trade-offs in, the reproductive allocation patterns within this plant population.

Key Words: Allium vineale • genetic correlations • heritability • life history traits • Liliaceae • multiple reproductive modes • trade-offs




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A. Sala, D. Verdaguer, and M. Vila
Sensitivity of the Invasive Geophyte Oxalis pes-caprae to Nutrient Availability and Competition
Ann. Bot., April 1, 2007; 99(4): 637 - 645.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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