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11 - Plant reproduction in neotropical dry forests

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2010

Harold A. Mooney
Affiliation:
Stanford University, California
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Summary

Introduction

Temporal and spatial patterns of water availability are perhaps the most widespread determinants of the characteristics of tropical vegetation. Both locally and regionally, floristic diversity and composition, growth forms, phenology and demography are largely functions of hydrology. However, few studies have focused on how the reproduction of tropical forest plants changes along a gradient of water stress, except in regard to phenology, despite extensive field studies (especially of floral biology) and many reviews of the literature (e.g. Baker et al., 1983; Bawa & Hadley, 1990). In this review I emphasize comparisons among species and sites in dry forest and, especially, contrasts between drier and wetter localities, with respect to a series of topics. Do differences in water stress correspond to different patterns of mating and of evolutionary mechanisms, as determined by the frequency of sexual types and of self-incompatibility systems? How do the timing and duration of flowering and fruiting change across a gradient in the duration of water stress, and what determines such changes? What changes occur in the spectra of pollen and seed dispersal systems, and of available vectors? Lastly, extending our perspective to life histories raises questions of how reproductive effort changes due to water stress effects on mortality and growth.

This review is drawn from a heterogeneous literature. There are few comparisons of reproductive biology among localities differing in water stress, or in associated species, which focus on intraspecific or intrageneric variation. Thus many comparisons must be attempted on the basis of dissimilar species lists, and in spite of different methods. In a few cases some attention has been given to local differences between dry and moist sites.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1995

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