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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11154/141152

Title: The adaptive value of cued dispersal in desert plants: seed retention and release in Mammillaria pectinifera, a small globose cactus
Authors: Peters, EM
Martorell-Delgado, Carlos
Ezcurra, E
Issue Date: 2009
Citation: Peters, EM; Martorell, C; Ezcurra, E (2009). The adaptive value of cued dispersal in desert plants: seed retention and release in Mammillaria pectinifera, a small globose cactus. The American Journal of Botany 96:1-6.
Abstract: Serotiny, or delayed seed dispersal, is common in fluctuating environments because it hedges the risks of establishment. Mammillaria pectinifera (Cactaceae) facultatively expels fruits in the year they are produced or retains them to disperse the seed over several years. We tested whether M. pectinifera increased fruit expulsion as a response to increased rainfall. While no fruit expulsion was observed in 1997, a dry year, in the wetter 1998 around 20% of all fruits formed were expelled from the maternal plant. A greenhouse experiment showed that high moisture results in the plants expelling all their fruits. Because in 1998 establishment was five times higher than in 1997, this response seems to be highly adaptive: Active fruit expulsion and consequent seed release increases the probability of establishment during pulses of high precipitation.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11154/141152
ISSN: 15372197
Appears in Collections:Departamento de Ecología y Recursos Naturales

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