Ce. Bach, Effects of clonal integration on response to sand burial and defoliation by the dune plant Ipomoea pes-caprae (Convolvulaceae), AUST J BOT, 48(2), 2000, pp. 159-166
This study examined the importance of clonal integration on the growth and
mortality of a tropical dune plant, Ipomoea pes-caprae L. (Roth), in respon
se to two stresses: sand burial and defoliation. Sand burial and artificial
defoliation treatments were applied to one shoot on daughter ramets, some
of which were connected to other ramets and some of which were not connecte
d to other ramets. Sand burial significantly enhanced both stem growth and
leaf production of the buried shoots, both for connected and unconnected ra
mets. Defoliation decreased stem growth of shoots other than the defoliated
shoot, but only for unburied ramets. Defoliation also had a greater negati
ve effect on growth of other shoots on connected ramets than on unconnected
ramets. At the level of the entire ramet, burial stimulated both stem grow
th and leaf production for connected ramets, but not for unconnected ramets
. These results support the hypothesis that physiological integration betwe
en ramets mediates the response to both sand burial and defoliation in Ipom
oea pes-caprae.