Jurik Thomas W
Department of Botany, Iowa State University, 50011, Ames, IA, USA.
Oecologia. 1991 Sep;87(4):539-550. doi: 10.1007/BF00320418.
Plots in a naturally occurring population of giant ragweed (Ambrosia trifida L.) near Ames, Iowa, USA were left unthinned (high density,=693 plants/m) or were thinned in early June 1989 to create low and medium densities of 10 and 50 plants/m. Size and light environment of individual plants were measured at monthly intervals from June to September. By September, low density plants had 15 times greater biomass/plant and 30 times greater leaf area/plant than high density plants, although biomass and leaf area per unit land area decreased with decreasing density. Plants at high density allocated more biomass to stem growth, but plants at medium and low density had successively higher leaf area ratios, higher potential photosynthetic rates, higher allocation to leaves, and higher growth rates. Average light on leaves decreased with increasing density and also decreased over the growing season in the low and medium densities. The distribution of light environments of individual plants was non-normal and skewed to the left in most months, in contrast to the rightwards skew of distributions of plant size parameters. Inequality in the distributions, as measured by coefficient of variation and Gini coefficients, increased over most of the growing season. There was little effect of density on inequality of stem diameter, height, or estimated dry weight, but inequality in reproductive output greatly increased with density. There was greater inequality in number of staminate flowers produced than in number of pistillate flowers and seeds produced. Path analysis indicated that early plant size was the most important predictor of final plant size and reproductive output; photosynthesis, conductance, and light environment were also significantly correlated with size and reproduction but usually were of minor importance. Variation in growth rate apparently increased inequality in plant size at low density, whereas belowground competition and death of smaller plants may have limited increases in inequality at high density.
在美国爱荷华州埃姆斯市附近,对自然生长的豚草(Ambrosia trifida L.)种群地块进行了处理,一部分地块不进行间苗(高密度,693株/平方米),另一部分地块在1989年6月初进行间苗,以形成10株/平方米和50株/平方米的低密度和中密度。从6月到9月,每月测量单株植物的大小和光照环境。到9月时,低密度植株的单株生物量比高密度植株大15倍,单株叶面积比高密度植株大30倍,尽管单位土地面积的生物量和叶面积随密度降低而减少。高密度植株将更多生物量分配到茎的生长上,但中低密度植株的叶面积比依次更高、潜在光合速率更高、分配到叶片的比例更高且生长速率更高。叶片上的平均光照随密度增加而降低,在低密度和中密度地块中,整个生长季节光照也在降低。单株植物光照环境的分布在大多数月份呈非正态且向左偏态,这与植物大小参数分布向右偏态形成对比。用变异系数和基尼系数衡量,分布的不平等在大部分生长季节都有所增加。密度对茎直径、高度或估计干重的不平等影响较小,但生殖产量的不平等随密度大幅增加。雄花数量的不平等大于雌花数量和种子数量的不平等。通径分析表明,早期植株大小是最终植株大小和生殖产量的最重要预测指标;光合作用、传导率和光照环境也与大小和生殖显著相关,但通常重要性较小。生长速率的变化显然在低密度下增加了植株大小的不平等,而地下竞争和较小植株的死亡可能限制了高密度下不平等的增加。