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(American Journal of Botany. 2000;87:1789-1792.)
© 2000 Botanical Society of America, Inc.

A test of the reserve meristem hypothesis using Verbascum thapsus (Scrophulariaceae)1

Christopher J. Lortie2,0 and Lonnie W. Aarssen3,0

0 Queen's University, Department of Biology, Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7L 3N6

The reserve meristem hypothesis predicts that latent meristems may act as a bet-hedging strategy given high-cost, predictable herbivory. Under this hypothesis, damage to a plant should elicit greater branching. This prediction was tested in Verbascum thapsus with three experiments manipulating the intensity and type of damage to reproductive tissue. In the first experiment, seed set was prevented in the treatment group by stigma excision and lanolin application to 80% of the flowers of each plant. In the second experiment, a minimum of two mating pairs of weevils were added to treated plants prior to the onset of flowering. In the third experiment, all fruits were sliced lengthwise twice. All three treatments significantly reduced seed set. In the first two experiments, treated plants significantly increased degree of branching (branch number and total branch length). This supports the reserve meristem hypothesis as an explanation for greater branching in larger plants of V. thapsus. Interestingly, the fruit destruction experiment failed to elicit a branching response, which suggests that the timing of damage is important.

Key Words: apical dominance • branching • compensation • herbivory • reproductive tissue • reserve meristem • Scrophulariaceae • Verbascum thapsus.




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P. A. Fay and H. L. Throop
Branching responses in Silphium integrifolium (Asteraceae) following mechanical or gall damage to apical meristems and neighbor removal
Am. J. Botany, June 1, 2005; 92(6): 954 - 959.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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