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Acta Prataculturae Sinica ›› 2010, Vol. 19 ›› Issue (1): 50-58.

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Effects of altitude on seed size on the eastern Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau

GUO Shu-qing1, QI Wei2, WANG Yu-lin1 , MA Xiong1, CHEN Xue-lin2, DU Guo-zhen2   

  1. 1.Department of Chemistry and Life Science, Hezuo Minorities Teachers College,Hezuo 747000,
    China;
    2.Key Laboratory of Arid and Grassland Ecology of Ministry of
    Education, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou 730000, China
  • Received:2009-02-21 Online:2010-01-25 Published:2010-02-20

Abstract: Seed size was studied in relation to altitude, growth form and phylogeny across 600 species on the eastern Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. 1) Considering the whole flora, seed size decreased with altitude(n=600, R2=0.029, P<0.001), in accord with previous studies; 2) The decline in seed size with altitude was significant within grasses(n=512,R2=0.026,P<0.001), but not within shrubs(n=72, R2=0.004, P=0.616), or trees(n=16, R2=0.005, P=0.795). 3) t-tests found that seeds of higher region species were 11.5% larger than seeds from lower region species of the same genus(df=131, t=2.724, P=0.007), but smaller than the threshold ±30%, so, there was no significant effect between seed size and altitude within a genus. This is in contrast to other studies that have found a positive correlation. Compared with seed size of species collected from lower regions in the 132 grass species-pairs 40.9%(54 species) of, higher species had larger seeds, 19.7%(26 species)had smaller, and 39.4%(52 species)had no difference. There was no uniform pattern relating seed size to altitude. In different genera, seed size responses to environment have varied over long-term ecological time.

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