Department of Plant Biology and Ecology, University of Seville, Apt. 1095, 41080, Seville, Spain.
Ann Bot. 2010 Dec;106(6):989-98. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcq197. Epub 2010 Sep 29.
Reproductive costs imply trade-offs in resource distribution at the physiological level, expressed as changes in future growth and/or reproduction. In dioecious species, females generally endure higher reproductive effort, although this is not necessarily expressed through higher somatic costs, as compensatory mechanisms may foster resource uptake during reproduction.
To assess effects of reproductive allocation on vegetative growth and physiological response in terms of costs and compensation mechanisms, a manipulative experiment of inflorescence bud removal was carried out in the sexually dimorphic species Corema album. Over two consecutive growing seasons, vegetative growth patterns, water status and photochemical efficiency were measured to evaluate gender-related differences.
Suppression of reproductive allocation resulted in a direct reduction in somatic costs of reproduction, expressed through changes in growth variables and plant physiological status. Inflorescence bud removal was related to an increase in shoot elongation and water potential in male and female plants. The response to inflorescence bud removal showed gender-related differences that were related to the moment of maximum reproductive effort in each sexual form: flowering in males and fruiting in females. Delayed costs of reproduction were found in both water status and growth variables, showing gender-related differences in resource storage and use.
Results are consistent with the existence of a trade-off between reproductive and vegetative biomass, indicating that reproduction and growth depend on the same resource pool. Gender-related morphological and physiological differences arise as a response to different reproductive resource requirements. Delayed somatic costs provide evidence of gender-related differences in resource allocation and storage. Adaptive differences between genders in C. album may arise through the development of mechanisms which compensate for the cost of reproduction.
生殖成本意味着在生理水平上资源分配的权衡,表现为未来生长和/或繁殖的变化。在雌雄异株的物种中,雌性通常承受更高的生殖努力,尽管这不一定表现为更高的体细胞成本,因为补偿机制可能会在繁殖期间促进资源摄取。
为了评估生殖分配对营养生长和生理响应的影响,即成本和补偿机制,我们在两性异形的物种 Corema album 中进行了花序芽去除的操作实验。在两个连续的生长季节中,测量了营养生长模式、水分状况和光化学效率,以评估性别相关差异。
生殖分配的抑制导致生殖体细胞成本的直接减少,表现在生长变量和植物生理状态的变化上。花序芽去除与雌雄植物的分枝伸长和水势增加有关。花序芽去除的响应表现出性别相关的差异,这与每个性形式的最大生殖努力时刻有关:雄性开花,雌性结果。在水状况和生长变量中都发现了延迟的生殖成本,表现出资源储存和利用的性别相关差异。
结果与生殖和营养生物量之间存在权衡一致,表明生殖和生长依赖于相同的资源库。性别相关的形态和生理差异是对不同生殖资源需求的反应。延迟的体细胞成本为性别相关的资源分配和储存差异提供了证据。在 C. album 中,性别之间的适应性差异可能是通过补偿生殖成本的机制的发展而产生的。