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(American Journal of Botany. 2003;90:865-876.)
© 2003 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Reproductive Biology

Effects of successional status, habit, sexual systems, and pollinators on flowering patterns in tropical rain forest trees1

Hyesoon Kang2 and Kamaljit S. Bawa3,4

2Department of Biology, Sungshin Women's University, Seoul, Republic of Korea 136-742; 3Department of Biology, University of Massachusetts, Boston, Massachusetts 02125 USA

Based on data from observations of 302 tree species at La Selva, Costa Rica, we tested a range of hypotheses about the relationship between flowering parameters such as time, frequency, and duration and ecological features such as successional status, habit, sexual systems, and pollen vectors with and without considering the effect of family membership. We predicted that early successional species would flower any time of the year, but species pollinated by different vectors as well as dioecious species would flower nonrandomly across seasons. However, there was little evidence that flowering time varied with successional status, pollen vectors, and sexual systems. As we predicted, supra-annual flowering was proportionately less common in early successional species as compared to late ones, in understory species as compared to canopy species, and in dioecious species as compared to those with hermaphroditic flowers. When considering phylogeny, however, supra-annual flowering in the understory was not as rare as predicted. Our prediction of longer flowering in the early successional species as compared to late successional species was also supported. Predictions about longer flowering of dioecious species as compared to hermaphroditic species and of species pollinated by generalist vectors as compared to the specialists were not supported, though there was a trend in the expected direction.

Key Words: Costa Rica • flowering patterns • phylogeny • pollinators • sexual selection • succession • tropical forests




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K. S. Bawa, H. Kang, and M. H. Grayum
Relationships among time, frequency, and duration of flowering in tropical rain forest trees
Am. J. Botany, June 1, 2003; 90(6): 877 - 887.
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