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Life history variation and infraspecific heterochrony inRhinanthus glacialis (Scrophulariaceae)

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Abstract

Comparative cultivation experiments were made with 14 populations of the annual, hemiparasitic speciesRhinanthus glacialis from seven different habitat types. Phenological data were recorded and plants from field samples and from corresponding experimental samples were morphologically analysed.

There are up to ten weeks difference in the start of flowering between means of the extreme experimental populations. Flowering time variation correlates with the number of internodes and also with most of the other morphological characters. Flowering time also shows close relationships to different grassland types and the examined populations appear to be well-adapted to the environmental conditions in natural or man-influenced grassland types as far as flowering time is concerned. The number of internodes is mostly insensitive to the applied experimental influences. The rate of internode production is constant. Trade-offs are suggested for some morphological traits (i.e., few internodes with few branches and thus few flowers as trade-off for early flowering). — Previous studies of life history variation based on population data have not been incorporated into the theory of heterochrony. The pattern of life history variation of populations ofR. glacialis together with information about morphology, ecology, and phylogeny suggests that some variants have evolved from ancestors via heterochronic processes. Earlier flowering populations from montane hay meadows, litter meadows, and dry meadows belong to paedomorphic variants. These have fewer internodes and branches as well as reduced height in comparison with the suggested ancestor. Later flowering populations from subalpine limestone grassland belong to a peramorphic variant with more internodes, more branches, and taller stems in comparison with the suggested ancestor.

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Zopfi, HJ. Life history variation and infraspecific heterochrony inRhinanthus glacialis (Scrophulariaceae). Pl Syst Evol 198, 209–233 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00984738

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