Breeding systems of dominant perennial plants of two disjunct warm desert ecosystems
- 31 August 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 27 (3) , 203-226
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00347467
Abstract
A comparison of the floral syndromes, flower biomasses, pollen and total sugar production of the dominant perennial species of two climatically similar but disjunct desert scrub ecosystems was made to assess the degree of convergence in breeding systems. Results indicate that the dominants at the northern site in the Sonoran Desert near Tucson Arizona, USA, possess more diverse floral types, utilize more reproductive methods, produce a greater annual biomass of flowers, provide more rewards for potential pollinators and employ a wider array of pollen vectors than those at the southern site near Andalgalá, Catamarca, Argentina. The discrepancies in these features can be best explained in terms of the differences in the annual dispersion of rainfall at the two sites. However, when compared to the dominant species of two Mediterranean scrub ecosystems, the breeding systems of the dominants of the desert scrub sites proved to be more similar to one another than to those of a neighboring but different ecosystem type.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Water Relations of Selected Species of Chaparral and Coastal Sage CommunitiesEcology, 1975
- Convergence in Vegetation Structure along Analogous Climatic Gradients in California and ChileEcology, 1975
- Comparative Ecology of Two LizardsIchthyology & Herpetology, 1971
- WIND POLLINATION IN THE ANGIOSPERMS: EVOLUTIONARY AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONSIDERATIONSEvolution, 1969
- Wind Pollination in the Angiosperms: Evolutionary and Environmental ConsiderationsEvolution, 1969
- Insect-Flower Associations in the High Arctic with Special Reference to NectarOikos, 1968
- Optimality Principles in BiologyPublished by Springer Nature ,1967
- TYPES OF NECTAR IN ANGIOSPERMSNew Phytologist, 1961