Consistent Individuality in the Timing and Magnitude of Flowering by Adenanthos obovatus (Proteaceae)
R. D. Wooller and S. J. Wooller
Australian Journal of Botany 46(6) 595 - 608
Abstract
The patterns of flowering of 58 individually marked
Adenanthos obovatus Labill. plants were recorded from
1983 to 1990 near Perth, Western Australia. Individuals started to flower
asynchronously but most then continued to flower until the end of the
nine-month flowering season each year. Individuals were highly consistent
between years both in the numbers of flowers they produced and in their onset
and peak of flowering relative to other members of the population. This
consistency was retained after rapid regeneration by 24 plants cut back to
ground level during one summer. The number of flowers borne by an individual
was not related to its above-ground biomass but to its duration of flowering,
and plants bearing more flowers set more seed. These traits may be related to
the pollination of this modally outcrossing species by a resident small
nectarivorous bird.
Full text doi:10.1071/BT97050
© CSIRO 1998





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