FLOWERING FREQUENCY OF PHILIPPINE SEAGRASSES

Citation
Cm. Duarte et al., FLOWERING FREQUENCY OF PHILIPPINE SEAGRASSES, Botanica marina, 40(6), 1997, pp. 497-500
Citations number
19
Journal title
ISSN journal
00068055
Volume
40
Issue
6
Year of publication
1997
Pages
497 - 500
Database
ISI
SICI code
0006-8055(1997)40:6<497:FFOPS>2.0.ZU;2-9
Abstract
The flowering frequency of the Philippine seagrasses Thalassia hempric hii (Ehrenb.) Aschers., Cymodocea rotundata Ehrenb. et Hempr. ex Asche rs., and Enhalus acoroides (L.f.) Royle, growing on a reef flat in Bol inao (Pangasinan Province, The Philippines) was examined based on exam ination of flowering scars on the seagrass shoots. The flowering frequ ency of C. rotundata and T.: hemprichii was low (0.064 flowers shoot(- 1) yr(-1) and 0.125 flowers shoot(-1) yr(-1), respectively), indicatin g that only a fraction of the shoots of these species will flower duri ng their life spans. Shoots of these species required a maturation per iod of between half a year and one year before flowering. In contrast, most of the E. acoroides shoots examined had flowered several times, producing, on average, 2.8 flowers shoot(-1) yr(-1). Examination of th e past flowering of E. acoroides revealed substantial interannual diff erences in flowering frequency in the period 1985-1992, with a maximum in 1987. Because of the large flowers of this species, the estimated biomass allocated to flowering was orders of magnitude greater for E. acoroides (35.8 g dw m(-2) yr(-1)) than for C. rotundata (0.021 g dw m (-2) yr(-1)) and T. hemprichii (3.56 g dw m(-2) yr(-1)). These results indicate that sexual reproduction could be a minor sink of resources for C. rotundata and I: hemprichii (< 1% of the annual above-ground pr oduction), while it may represent a dominant source of losses of resou rces acquired by E. acoroides (up to 50% of the annual above-ground pr oduction). The implications of these contrasting strategies in the flo wering effort of the seagrass species examined are, however, unclear, but the large output of sexual propagules of E. acoroides, compared to the other two species, should confer this species a greater capacity to recover after disturbance.