Resource manipulation reveals flexible allocation rules to growth and reproduction in a Mediterranean evergreen oak

TitleResource manipulation reveals flexible allocation rules to growth and reproduction in a Mediterranean evergreen oak
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2014
AuthorsPulido, F., Moreno G., Garcia E., Obrador J. J., Bonal R., & Díaz M.
JournalJOURNAL OF PLANT ECOLOGY
Volume7
Pagination77-85
Keywordsacorn abortion, allocational plasticity, Dehesa, growth-reproduction trade-offs, nutrient addition, Quercus ilex, resource allocation
Abstract

Aims In plants, resource allocation to growth and reproduction may depart from trade-off expectations if (i) investment in growth and reproduction relies on different resource pools, (ii) allocation to reproduction is dependent upon reaching some growth threshold or (iii) reproduction is developmentally linked to growth, both functions relying on the same resource pool. We examined the effects of enhanced resource level on patterns of resource allocation to growth and reproduction in holm oak (Quercus ilex sbsp. ballota), a Mediterranean evergreen tree. Methods In the experimental year (2003), we manipulated the amount of soil nutrients in autumn (to increase nutrient uptake during shoot elongation in the following spring) and soil water in summer (to increase water uptake during acorn growth). Indicators of growth and male and female reproduction were estimated in the pre-experimental (2002), experimental (2003) and post-experimental (2004) years. Important Findings Fertilized trees produced significantly longer shoots, but the number of female flowers per shoot was not affected by treatments. The production of male catkins was also enhanced by fertilization. Irrigation did not affect the production of female flowers or abortion rates. Growth and female reproduction showed no consistent relationship in untreated trees, but resource addition elicited a growth-female reproduction trade-off in the experimental year. The sign of this significant relationship changed in the post-experimental year, indicating the existence of lagged effects of resource manipulation on acorn production. Overall, patterns of allocation to growth and reproduction varied as a function of sex, resource availability and year, a result consistent with extreme allocational plasticity in holm oak.