Skip to main content
Log in

Response of Solidago canadensis clones to competition

  • Original Papers
  • Published:
Oecologia Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Summary

Transplants of ten Solidago canadensis clones were grown under high and low competition in the field to determine whether clones differed in survival, growth, and reproduction under natural conditions. Transplants had higher probability of survival and flowering and were larger in all measures of size when competition was experimentally reduced. Clones differed in almost all these measures of success, but only when variance among transplants within clones was reduced by excluding transplants that experienced heavy herbivore damage. Differences among clones were more apparent under low competition than under high competition, despite higher coefficients of variation within clones under low competition. Adjusting transplant size for initial size (parent ramet rhizome mass) did not change these results, although clones did differ in parent rhizome mass. All of these results suggest that there is little potential for selection to discriminate among these clones. Despite the strong differences in transplant performance between the competition treatments and among clones, the clones did not differ in competitive ability-almost none of the clone x competition interactions were significant. In addition, the measures of success of each clone were usually positively correlated between the high and low competition treatments, suggesting there were no tradeoffs between performance under high and low competition for these clones.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Aarssen LW, Turkington R (1985a) Biotic specialization between neighbouring genotypes in Lolium perenne and Trifolium repens from a permanent pasture. J Ecol 73:605–614

    Google Scholar 

  • Aarssen LW, Turkington R (1985b) Competitive relations among species from pastures of different ages. Can J Bot 63:2319–2325

    Google Scholar 

  • Antonovics J (1984) Genetic variation within populations. In: Dirzo R, Sarukhan J (eds) Perspectives on plant population ecology. Sinauer Associates, pp 229–241

  • Baird DD, Upchurch RP, Homesley WB, Franz JE (1971) Introduction of a new broadspectrum postemergence herbicide class with utility or herbaceous perennial weed control. Proc Northeast Weed Contr Conf 26:64–68

    Google Scholar 

  • Connell JH (1983) On the prevalence and relative importance of interspecific competition: evidence from field experiments. Am Nat 122:661–696

    Google Scholar 

  • Dixon WJ (1988) BMDP statistical software. University of California Press, Berkeley

    Google Scholar 

  • Ellstrand NC, Roose ML (1987) Patterns of genotypic diversity in clonal plant species. Am J Bot 74:123–131

    Google Scholar 

  • Ennos RA (1985) The significance of genetic variation for root growth within a natural population of white clover (Trifolium repens). J Ecol 73:615–624

    Google Scholar 

  • Ford H (1981) Competitive relationships amongst apomictic dandelions. Biol J Linn Soc 15:355–368

    Google Scholar 

  • Fowler NL, Antonovics J (1981) Small scale variability in the demography of transplants of two herbaceous species. Ecology 62:1450–1457

    Google Scholar 

  • Garbutt K, Bazzaz FA (1987) Population niche structure: differential response of Abutilon theophrasti progeny to resource gradients. Oecologia (Berlin) 72:291–296

    Google Scholar 

  • Goldberg DE (1987) Neighborhood competition in an old-field plant community. Ecology 68:1211–1223

    Google Scholar 

  • Goldberg DE, Werner PA (1983) The effects of size of opening in vegetation and litter cover on seedling establishment of goldenrods (Solidago spp.). Oecologia (Berlin) 60:149–155

    Google Scholar 

  • Hamrick JL (1979) Genetic variation and longevity. In: Solbrig OT, Jain S, Johnson GB, Raven PH (eds) Topics in plant population biology. Columbia University Press. New York, pp 84–113

    Google Scholar 

  • Harper JL (1977) Population biology of plants. Academic Press, New York, pp 892

    Google Scholar 

  • Hartnett DC, Bazzaz FA (1983) Physiological integration among intraclonal ramets in Solidago canadensis. Ecology 64:779–788

    Google Scholar 

  • Hartnett DC, Bazzaz FA (1985a) The genet and ramet population dynamics of Solidago canadensis in an abandoned field. J Ecol 73:407–413

    Google Scholar 

  • Hartnett DC, Bazzaz FA (1985b) The integration of neighborhood effects by clonai genets in Solidago canadensis. J Ecol 73:415–427

    Google Scholar 

  • Hartnett DC, Hartnett BB, Bazzaz FA (1987) Persistence of ambrosia trifida populations in old fields and responses to successional change. Am J Bot 74:1239–1248

    Google Scholar 

  • Heywood JS, Levin DA (1984) Genotype-environment interactions in determining fitness in dense, artificial populations of Phlox drummondii. Oecologia (Berlin) 61:363–371

    Google Scholar 

  • Hume L, Cavers PB (1981) A methodological problem in genecology. Seeds versus clones as source material for uniform gardens. Can J Bot 59:763–768

    Google Scholar 

  • Kelley SE, Clay K (1987) Interspecific competitive interactions and the maintenance of genotypic variation within two perennial grasses. Evolution 41:92–103

    Google Scholar 

  • Martin MM, Harding J (1981) Evidence for the evolution of competition between two species of annual plants. Evolution 35:975–987

    Google Scholar 

  • Schmid B (1985) Clonal growth in grassland perennials. III. Genetic variation and plasticity between and within populations of Bellis perennis and Prunella vulgaris. J Ecol 73:819–830

    Google Scholar 

  • Schoen DJ, Stewart SC, Lechowicz MJ, Bell G (1986) Partitioning the transplant site effect in reciprocal transplant experiments with Impatiens capensis and I. pallida. Oecologia (Berlin) 70:149–154

    Google Scholar 

  • Schoener TW (1983) Field experiments on interspecific competition. Am Nat 122:240–285

    Google Scholar 

  • Schwaegerle KE, Bazzaz FA (1987) Differentiation among nine populations of Phlox: response to environmental gradients. Ecology 68:54–64

    Google Scholar 

  • Solbrig OT, Simpson BB (1977) A garden experiment on competition between biotypes of the common dandelion (Taraxacum officinale). J Ecol 65:427–430

    Google Scholar 

  • Turkington R (1979) Neighbour relationships in grass-legume communities. IV. Fine scale biotic differentiation. Can J Bot 57:2711–2716

    Google Scholar 

  • Turkington R, Harper JL (1979) The growth, distribution and neighbor relationships of Trifolium repens in a permanent pasture. IV. Fine-scale biotic differentiation. J Ecol 67:245–254

    Google Scholar 

  • Werner PA (1988) Goldenrods (Solidago spp.) on edaphic gradients: a field experiment of competition vs. tolerance using reciprocal transplants. Ecol Monogr (in press)

  • Werner PA, Bradbury IK, Gross RS (1980) The biology of Canadian weeds. 45. Solidago canadensis L. Can J Plant Sci 60:1393–1409

    Google Scholar 

  • Zangerl AR, Bazzaz FA (1983) Plasticity and genotypic variation in photosynthetic behavior of an early and a late successional species of Polygonum. Oecologia (Berlin) 57:270–273

    Google Scholar 

  • Zangerl AR, Bazzaz FA (1984) Niche partitioning between two phosphoglucoisomerase genotypes in Amaranthus retroflexus. Ecology 65:218–222

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Goldberg, D.E. Response of Solidago canadensis clones to competition. Oecologia 77, 357–364 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00378042

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00378042

Key words

Navigation