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Population ecology of an afro-tropical savanna herb, Lapeirousia rivularis, in Zambia

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Abstract

Detailed demographic studies of herbaceuos plants in afro-tropicalsavannas are extremely rare in published literature. I studied phenology andpopulation dynamics of a perennial herb, Lapeirousiarivularis Wanntorp, at a savanna site in Zambia over a 4-yearperiod, from 1997 to 2001, using enumeration techniques in permanent andtemporary quadrants. The age of the plants was accurately determined frompersistent annual sheaths that accumulate around the corm throughout the lifeofthe plant while the estimated survivorship of the 1998 cohort was developedfroma mathematical model based on the observed mortality of the cohort over a3-yearperiod.L. rivularis completed its annual phenological cycle in asingle rainy season. Plants sprouted from perennating corms in early December,flowered, fruited and dispersed seeds by end of January. Seeds germinatedimmediately after dispersal and seedlings produced small corms before aerialparts died early in the dry season. L. rivularis has twomorphs: a vegetative morph and a reproductive morph; the latter bears severalleaves and flower stalks. In the vegetative morph, the corm is renewed annuallywhile the corms of the reproductive morph did not appear to be renewed. Insteadcorms grew larger and produced lateral daughter corms that became independentramets the following rainy season.Most L. rivularis plants reached reproductive maturitywhen they were 6–10 years old. Reproductive success, seedlingestablishment and recruitment varied from year to year in the grassland plotperhaps because of fluctuations in weather conditions and heavy episodic insectherbivory. The survivorship curve of L. rivularis wascharacteristically concave due to high juvenile mortality (0.2–0.5) andvery low adult mortality (0.03). Although about 3% of the plants live to be upto 30–35 years, the mean age of the population in 2001 was 6.4 yearsbecause of the predominance of juvenile plants. The production of a protectivesheath at the end of the rainy season and the accumulation of old sheathsaroundthe fleshy corm are apparent adaptations against desiccation during the longdryseason drought when the topsoil remains below wilting point. The high juvenilemortality during the dry season is probably caused by inadequate protection bythe few sheaths around the corm against desiccation.Population dynamics in L. rivularis were caused byvariable annual recruitment and high juvenile mortality. Population densitydoubled in 1999 due to good fruiting success in the previous season that wasassociated with good weather conditions and negligible herbivory. Althoughcultivation had a significant negative effect on the population of L.rivularis, it increased consistency in fruiting success andproduction of fruits per plant, presumably because of improvement insoil-moisture status, reduction in plant competition and by providing temporalescape from insect herbivory through delayed flowering. The phenology and lifehistory of L. rivularis exhibit adaptations to a savannaenvironment that is characterized by disturbance and stress caused by seasonaldrought, fire, episodic herbivory and cultivation.

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Chidumayo, E. Population ecology of an afro-tropical savanna herb, Lapeirousia rivularis, in Zambia. Plant Ecology 165, 275–286 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1022265726139

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