Seed Weight as a Function of Life Form, Elevation and Life Zone in Neotropical Forests
- 1 March 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Biotropica
- Vol. 17 (1) , 32-39
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2388375
Abstract
Seeds from over 365 spp. of 8 plant families [Melastomataceae, Gesneriaceae, Bromeliaceae, Bignoniaceae, Araliaceae, Myrsinaceae, Campanulaceae, and Rubiaceae] were excised, were excised, and dry wt determined, from fruit previously collected from Costa Rica, Panama and Peru, and deposited in the US National Museum of Natural History. This study was undertaken to determine whether data from tropical plants were consistent with temperate zone work showing correlations of seed size with life form and certain aspects of the physical environment. In order to control for intraspecific variation, a seed wt class system (Baker 1972) was used. As seen in temperature zone studies, tropical species show significant differences in seed wt means among trees, shrubs and herbs (largest to smallest). Tropical epiphytes, however, show a bimodal pattern; though seeds from some plant families (e.g., Orchidaceae) are tiny, many epiphyte seeds (primarily from Melastomataceae, Gesneriaceae and Bromeliaceae) were equivalent to, or larger than, those of shrubs. Seeds from tropical herbaceous vines were comparable in wt to those of herbs, while seeds of woody lianas(all from Bignoniaceae) were comparable to trees in wt. Seed wt analyzed by elevation and life zone showed no conclusive patterns.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Variation in Average Seed Size and Fruit Seediness in a Fruit Crop of a Guanacaste Tree (Leguminosae: Enterolobium cyclocarpum)American Journal of Botany, 1982
- Bird Species Diversity on an Andean Elevational GradientEcology, 1977
- Seed Weight of Amaranthus Retroflexus in Relation to Moisture and Length of Growing SeasonEcology, 1977