Cota-Sánchez J Hugo, Abreu Deusa D
University of Saskatchewan, Department of Biology, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5E2, Canada.
J Exp Bot. 2007;58(14):3865-73. doi: 10.1093/jxb/erm232. Epub 2007 Nov 1.
Vivipary, the germination of seeds before they are shed from the parent plant, is a rare event in angiosperms involving complex ecophysiological processes. Pseudovivipary and cryptovivipary occur in approximately 30 (2%) species of the cactus family. A remarkable case of vivipary in Epiphyllum phyllanthus is described here. Information is provided regarding the biology of viviparous fruits, morphology, mortality, survival rates of viviparous offspring, and some eco-evolutionary implications of this reproductive strategy in the Cactaceae. This epiphytic cactus has no host-specific relationship. A low proportion (33.3%) of individuals produced viviparous fruits. Seed number/fruit varied from 197 to 230 with percentage of viviparous germination from 97.5% to 99%. The viviparous seedlings exhibited normal development and were no different from non-viviparous offspring. Transplanting experiments showed that the first week is critical for seedling establishment, and high mortality occurred in the three treatments used: 69% on the phorophyte surface, 58.6% on the ground, and 44.8% under controlled conditions. The number of survivors gradually stabilized, and the contribution to establishment was comparable in each of the treatments after the acclimation phase. It is suggested that vivipary is associated with thermoregulation, parental care, conspecific nursing, and rapid seedling establishment. Germination is not a limiting factor in the perpetuation of this viviparous species, but seedling establishment is. In viviparous individuals of E. phyllanthus, seedling mortality during establishment rather than failure to germinate within the fruit is a limiting factor affecting local population density. Overall, viviparity is an intrinsic, genetic event involving high metabolic costs favouring germination and dispersal of the fittest offspring regardless of substrate and environmental conditions.
胎萌现象,即种子在从母株脱落之前就开始萌发,这在被子植物中是一种罕见的现象,涉及复杂的生态生理过程。假胎萌和隐胎萌现象大约出现在仙人掌科的30种(占2%)植物中。本文描述了叶状昙花(Epiphyllum phyllanthus)中一个显著的胎萌案例。文中提供了有关胎萌果实的生物学特性、形态学、死亡率、胎萌后代的存活率,以及这种繁殖策略在仙人掌科中的一些生态进化意义的信息。这种附生仙人掌没有特定的寄主关系。产生胎萌果实的个体比例较低(33.3%)。每个果实的种子数量在197到230之间,胎萌萌发率在97.5%到99%之间。胎萌幼苗发育正常,与非胎萌后代没有差异。移植实验表明,第一周对幼苗定植至关重要,在所采用的三种处理中死亡率都很高:在支持植物表面为69%,在地面为58.6%,在受控条件下为44.8%。存活个体数量逐渐稳定,在适应期过后,每种处理对定植的贡献相当。研究表明,胎萌与温度调节、亲代抚育、同种照料以及幼苗的快速定植有关。萌发不是这种胎萌物种延续的限制因素,但幼苗定植是。在叶状昙花的胎萌个体中,定植期间的幼苗死亡率而非果实内种子未能萌发是影响当地种群密度的限制因素。总体而言,胎萌是一个内在的遗传事件,涉及高昂的代谢成本,有利于最适后代的萌发和传播,而不受基质和环境条件的影响。