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From flowering to dispersal

Reproductive ecology of an endemic plant, Astragalus australis var. olympicus (Fabaceae)
Publication Name American Journal of Botany
Data Source American Journal of Botany
Data Type Publication
Volume 86
Journal Number 9
Publication Year 1999
Publication Place
Publisher
Pagination pp. 1248-1256
ISBN/ISSN

Astragalus australis var. olympicus is an endemic plant of the Olympic Mountains, Washington. It is considered a Species of Concern by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. This study focuses on the reproductive biology of the plant from flower production through seed germination to identify possible weak points that might contribute to its rarity and impede its conservation. Most plants produced a large mean number of flowers and ovules (314.8 and 4106, respectively). In decreasing importance, ovules in fruits were lost to predation, seed abortion, and lack of fertilization. The percentages of these fates differed among sites and years. Excluding pollinators by bagging flowers reduced seed set by ~50%, but seed set per fruit and seed mass were unaffected. Germination was affected by scarification, temperature, and moisture availability. About 11% of seeds damaged by predispersal seed predators (weevil larvae) remained viable and were released from dormancy. I hypothesize that predispersal seed predation (over 80% at one site) has a negative effect on population growth. Conservation of this species could benefit from improved seed set and decreased seed predation.

Astragalus australis var. olympicus
rare species
conservation
Fabaceae
ovule fate
pollination
seed predation
spatio-temportal variability
Olympic Mountains
Washington