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Growth in male and female aspen clones: a twenty-five-year longitudinal study

Field studies of Populus tremuloides at two sites in northern lower Michigan were conducted to compare the vegetative growth of ramets for male and female clones over a 25-yr period. Thirty-one clones were surveyed in 1981; 23 of these clones had been surveyed in 1956. There was no significant diffe...

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Published in:Ecology (Durham) 1985-12, Vol.66 (6), p.1921-1927
Main Authors: Sakai, Ann K., Burris, Timothy A.
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Language:English
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container_issue 6
container_start_page 1921
container_title Ecology (Durham)
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creator Sakai, Ann K.
Burris, Timothy A.
description Field studies of Populus tremuloides at two sites in northern lower Michigan were conducted to compare the vegetative growth of ramets for male and female clones over a 25-yr period. Thirty-one clones were surveyed in 1981; 23 of these clones had been surveyed in 1956. There was no significant difference between the sexes in density (basal area divided by clonal area), mean diameter at breast height, oldest ramet, or mean annual ring-width growth. Relative to male clones, female clones had larger numbers of ramets and greater basal area, showed a larger increase in areal spread over the 25-yr period, and had a different size class distribution. These data do not support the hypothesis that greater female investment in sexual reproduction associated with fruit production is at the expense of vegetative growth. The results suggest that further empirical longitudinal studies and measures of clonal growth as well as ramet growth are necessary to clarify the relationship of sexual reproduction and vegetative growth in long-lived clonal plants such as trembling aspen.
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Thirty-one clones were surveyed in 1981; 23 of these clones had been surveyed in 1956. There was no significant difference between the sexes in density (basal area divided by clonal area), mean diameter at breast height, oldest ramet, or mean annual ring-width growth. Relative to male clones, female clones had larger numbers of ramets and greater basal area, showed a larger increase in areal spread over the 25-yr period, and had a different size class distribution. These data do not support the hypothesis that greater female investment in sexual reproduction associated with fruit production is at the expense of vegetative growth. The results suggest that further empirical longitudinal studies and measures of clonal growth as well as ramet growth are necessary to clarify the relationship of sexual reproduction and vegetative growth in long-lived clonal plants such as trembling aspen.</abstract><cop>Washington, DC</cop><pub>Ecological Society of America</pub><doi>10.2307/2937388</doi><tpages>7</tpages></addata></record>
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identifier ISSN: 0012-9658
ispartof Ecology (Durham), 1985-12, Vol.66 (6), p.1921-1927
issn 0012-9658
1939-9170
language eng
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source JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; Wiley-Blackwell Journals (Backfile Content)
subjects Animal and plant ecology
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Annuals
Autoecology
Biological and medical sciences
CLONE
CLONES
CRECIMIENTO
CROISSANCE
Crops
Density
Female animals
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
GROWTH
Longitudinal studies
Male animals
MICHIGAN
Plant growth
Plants
Plants and fungi
POPULUS TREMULOIDES
SEX
Sex ratio
SEXE
SEXO
STEMS
Synecology
TALLO
Terrestrial ecosystems
TIGE
Vegetative growth
title Growth in male and female aspen clones: a twenty-five-year longitudinal study
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