Flower number and floral components in ten angiosperm species: an examination of assumptions about trade-offs in reproductive evolution

Authors
Citation
M. Burd, Flower number and floral components in ten angiosperm species: an examination of assumptions about trade-offs in reproductive evolution, BIOL J LINN, 68(4), 1999, pp. 579-592
Citations number
48
Categorie Soggetti
Biology
Journal title
BIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY
ISSN journal
00244066 → ACNP
Volume
68
Issue
4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
579 - 592
Database
ISI
SICI code
0024-4066(199912)68:4<579:FNAFCI>2.0.ZU;2-7
Abstract
A common approach to modelling reproductive evolution in flowering plants i ncludes an implicit assumption that module number and resource allocation p er module follow an inverse hyperbolic trade-off. This assumption has not b een thoroughly tested. In ten herbaceous and small woody species I examined phenotypic partial correlations between flower number (measured in relatio n to vegetative biomass) and each of three floral components: pollen number per flower, ovule number per flower, and corolla size. Significantly negat ive correlations between flower number and at least one of the floral compo nents occurred in four of the ten species. These phenotypic correlations su ggest the existence of true (genetically based) trade-offs, because environ mental correlations are likely to be positive, but the significant negative relationships are linear except in one case. Thus, evolutionary trade offs involving flower number seem likely in some cases, but there is little to indicate that hyperbolic trade-offs are common. The phenotypic patterns inv estigated here cannot provide definitive answers about the form of trade-of fs. Nonetheless, theoretical attention to the potential evolutionary conseq uences of trade-offs other than the implicit hyperbolic form is needed. (C) 1999 The Linnean Society of London.