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Journal ArticleDOI

Population growth and viability analyses of the clonal woodland herb, Asarum canadense

TLDR
Investigation of the relative impact of reproduction and survival on the persistence of populations of the North American woodland herb, Asarum canadense found sexual and clonal reproduction had less impact on population growth than did survival, and seedling recruitment was important, as indicated by the relatively high rates of genet turnover.
Abstract
1  Long-term demographic field studies combined with simulation models that incorporated two types of stochasticity were used to investigate the relative impact of reproduction and survival on the persistence of populations of the North American woodland herb, Asarum canadense. 2  Field data were collected over 7 years in replicate plots located in early and late successional forest habitat. By following marked ramets from year to year it proved possible to investigate the demography both of ramets and of groups of genetically identical ramets (clones). 3  A. canadense exhibited considerable temporal and spatial variation in reproductive success, survivorship, and population growth rates. Populations of ramets and clones in late successional forest habitats held their own, while those in early successional forest habitats declined. 4  Sexual and clonal reproduction had less impact on population growth than did survival. Nonetheless, seedling recruitment was important, as indicated by the relatively high rates of genet turnover in A. canadense populations. 5  Results from simulations indicated that the vast majority of genets in both habitat types failed to reproduce. Over their lifetime, simulated genets produced a maximum of 44 and 77 seedlings in early and late successional forest habitat, respectively. 6  Although A. canadense genets are potentially immortal, the maximum life span for 2000 simulated genets was 104 years. Simulated genets lived a mean of 3.0 and 4.8 years in early and late successional forest habitat, respectively. 7  Simulated A. canadense populations only persisted in late successional forest habitat. Within simulated late successional forest populations, the number of ramets tended to decrease over time, while the number of genets tended to increase over time. 8  The minimum viable population size for A. canadense ramets in late successional forest was 25 individuals with environmental stochasticity only, and 1000 individuals with both environmental and demographic stochasticity; for genets in late successional forest, the corresponding numbers were 20 and 25, respectively. 9  Ramet and genet dynamics differed greatly in A. canadense, highlighting the importance of long-term demographic studies at each of these levels.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Long-distance seed dispersal in plant populations.

TL;DR: It is argued that genetic methods provide a broadly applicable way to monitor long-distance seed dispersal and, hence, that better data is needed from the tails of seeds that travel long distances.
Journal ArticleDOI

Population viability analyses in plants: challenges and opportunities

TL;DR: This review of 95 plant population viability analyses (PVAs) reveals that most studies consider one species, only a few populations and are based on data collected for less than five years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seed dispersal and the holocene migration of woodland herbs

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the long-term spread of the understory herb Asarum canadense by ants and found that the largest distance ants are known to move the seeds of any woodland herb is up to 35 m.
Journal ArticleDOI

Population size and the risk of local extinction: empirical evidence from rare plants

TL;DR: It is concluded that the extinction of populations was at least partly due to stochastic processes, supported by the fact that in allspecies a considerable proportion of small populations survived and developed intolarge populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stochastic matrix models for conservation and management: A comparative review of methods

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review applications of stochastic matrix models to problems in conservation and use simulation studies to compare the performance of different analytic methods currently in use, finding that model conclusions are likely to be robust to the choice of parametric distribution used to model vital rate fluctuations over time.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Genetics and demography in biological conservation

TL;DR: The practical need in biological conservation for understanding the interaction of demographic and genetic factors in extinction may provide a focus for fundamental advances at the interface of ecology and evolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Minimum Population Sizes for Species Conservation

Mark L. Shaffer
- 01 Feb 1981 - 
TL;DR: For example, it has been shown that the smaller the population, the more susceptible it is to extinction from various causes as mentioned in this paper, and therefore, conservation efforts have been and will continue to be at the single species level.
Journal ArticleDOI

How should we define ‘fitness’ for general ecological scenarios?

TL;DR: The core idea being that there exists a unique general fitness measure that concisely summarizes the overall time course of potential invasions by initially rare mutant phenotypes is summarized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic basis for species vulnerability in the Cheetah

TL;DR: The extreme genetic monomorphism, especially at the major histocompatibility complex, and the apparent hypersensitivity of the cheetah to a viral pathogen may be related, provide a biological basis for understanding the adaptive significance of abundant genetic variation in outbred mammalian species.
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