NSIP

Resources

Title
Evolutionary and ecological correlates of early seedling morphology in east African trees and shrubs
Author(s)
Zanne A.E., Chapman C.A., Kitajima K.
Published
2005
Publisher
American Journal of Botany
Abstract
Seed size and cotyledon morphology are two key juvenile traits that have evolved in response to changes in plant species life-history strategies and habitat associations. Correlations of these traits with each other and with other juvenile traits were examined for 70 species of trees and shrubs in Kibale National Park, Uganda. Although species with photosynthetic cotyledons were more abundant than in other tropical floras, both univariate and multivariate analyses supported trait associations expected from the literature. Trait values varied continuously across species, yet mean trait values differed significantly among habitat association types. Species with large seeds, large seedlings, thick storage cotyledons, slow germination, large-stature adults, and dispersal by large animals were common in forest and gap habitats. An opposite suite of traits was common in open habitats (grassland and edge). Analyses incorporating phylogeny (independent contrasts and omnibus tests) confirmed that these suites of traits showed correlated evolution. Cotyledon functional morphology yielded a strong phylogenetic signal, while seed mass was labile. Nevertheless, contingent change tests found that evolutionary change from photosynthetic to reserve cotyledons was more likely when disperser and perhaps seed size of ancestral species were already large, suggesting a strong interdependency among these traits.
Keywords
evolution; life history; Africa; East Africa; Eastern Hemisphere; Kibale National Park; Sub-Saharan Africa; Uganda; World; Animalia

Access Full Text

A full-text copy of this article may be available. Please email the WCS Library to request.




Back

PUB12345