Title of article :
PLASTICITY FACILITATES Anthemis cotula TO INVADE DIVERSE HABITATS
Author/Authors :
Rashid, Irfan Government College Baramulla - Department of Botany, Indi , Reshi, Zafar A. University of Kashmir - Department of Botany, India
From page :
335
To page :
348
Abstract :
In view of the significant contribution of phenotypicplasticity in survival and spread of invasive species inheterogeneous adventive environments, present study was carried out on natural populations of Anthemis cotula L. (Stinkingmayweed) growing in habitats that differ in disturbance. The vegetative (stem height, number of lateral branches, root mass,and shoot mass) and reproductive (number of disc florets perplant and per capitulum and number of capitula per plant) traits exhibited significant phenotypic plasticity across such habitats.Number of disc florets per plant (used as the measure of fitness)was highest in riparian populations and lowest in populations growing in habitats with relatively low disturbance. Fitness in populations supported by habitats with high disturbance was 5183.85 disc florets per plant. Although the number of discflorets per capitulum did not vary significantly across populations supported by different habitats, the number of capitula per plant ranged from 148.10 in riparian populations to 20.74 in populations growing in low disturbance habitats. Among the vegetative attributes, stem mass and number of lateral branchesper plant varied significantly across populations supported by habitats with different disturbance regimes. Quantification of the phenotypic selection acting on these vegetative and reproductive traits estimated through use of selection differentials and gradients varied in sign and strength across the sites which indicate that different traits are favoured under different habitat conditions. Comparison of the phenotypic plasticity of A. cotulawith a con-familial alien but less invasive species-Galinsogaparviflora - allows us to conclude that phenotypic plasticity notonly enables the former to maintain fitness across a broad range of environments but also contributes significantly to itsinvasiveness in the Kashmir Himalaya.
Keywords :
Invasive , plasticity , fitness , Kashmir Himalaya
Journal title :
Pakistan Journal of Weed Science Research
Journal title :
Pakistan Journal of Weed Science Research
Record number :
2576517
Link To Document :
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