Reproductive features of Celmisia species (Asteraceae) in relation to altitude and geographical range in New Zealand
Reproductive features of Celmisia species (Asteraceae) in relation to altitude and geographical range in New Zealand
A range of seed and flower characters was examined in 37 species of the New Zealand genus Celmisia (Asteraceae)
to determine whether there were any relationships between reproductive features and the geographic or altitudinal
ranges of the species. Using published sources and herbarium material, flower attractiveness to pollinators was
measured in terms of capitulum size and ray/disc length ratio. Dispersibility was measured in terms of seed dry
weight, seed terminal velocity, pappus/seed length ratio, and scapdeaf length ratio. Altitude (minimum and
maximum) and geographic ranges (number of 1" latitude x 1" longitude squares occupied) were obtained from
published sources. A multivariate principal components analysis using 12 morphological characters revealed the
presence of five groups of species differing in capitulum size, seed weight, pappus length, number of pappus bristles,
leaf length and scape length. Linear regressions showed that altitude was significantly and negatively related to
seed dry weight and capitulum size, and positively to scapdeaf length ratio. Geographic range is negatively related
to capitulum size, and positively to ray/disc ratio and altitudinal range. Amongst the seed features measured, seed
weight was the best predictor of terminal velocity (an inverse measure of dispersability), but lighter seeds also had
a higher pappudseed length ratio. The frequency distribution of the geographic ranges of the species is highly
skewed, with many local species (86% occurring in 15 or fewer one-degree squares) and very few common ones.
Two species (C. gracilenta and C. grarninifolia) are notably more common than all the others. A comparison of
these species with the others shows that, on average, they have lighter seeds with more bristles, taller scapes and
higher ray/disc ratios, but have smaller capitula. The low geographic abundance of the rare species could not readily
be attributed to any specific reproductive feature, possibly because of the multiple types of rarity represented within
the genus.
dispersibility, mountain daisies, rarity, seed size
51-58
Fenner, M.
4de8d311-9bd9-4270-8634-113508ea988f
Lee, W.G.
76fa01dc-c904-4630-8c73-e557eab3c715
Pinn, E.H.
f72c0b84-abc8-45ea-9865-66d8259f7a85
January 2008
Fenner, M.
4de8d311-9bd9-4270-8634-113508ea988f
Lee, W.G.
76fa01dc-c904-4630-8c73-e557eab3c715
Pinn, E.H.
f72c0b84-abc8-45ea-9865-66d8259f7a85
Fenner, M., Lee, W.G. and Pinn, E.H.
(2008)
Reproductive features of Celmisia species (Asteraceae) in relation to altitude and geographical range in New Zealand.
Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 74 (1), .
(doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.2001.tb01376.x).
Abstract
A range of seed and flower characters was examined in 37 species of the New Zealand genus Celmisia (Asteraceae)
to determine whether there were any relationships between reproductive features and the geographic or altitudinal
ranges of the species. Using published sources and herbarium material, flower attractiveness to pollinators was
measured in terms of capitulum size and ray/disc length ratio. Dispersibility was measured in terms of seed dry
weight, seed terminal velocity, pappus/seed length ratio, and scapdeaf length ratio. Altitude (minimum and
maximum) and geographic ranges (number of 1" latitude x 1" longitude squares occupied) were obtained from
published sources. A multivariate principal components analysis using 12 morphological characters revealed the
presence of five groups of species differing in capitulum size, seed weight, pappus length, number of pappus bristles,
leaf length and scape length. Linear regressions showed that altitude was significantly and negatively related to
seed dry weight and capitulum size, and positively to scapdeaf length ratio. Geographic range is negatively related
to capitulum size, and positively to ray/disc ratio and altitudinal range. Amongst the seed features measured, seed
weight was the best predictor of terminal velocity (an inverse measure of dispersability), but lighter seeds also had
a higher pappudseed length ratio. The frequency distribution of the geographic ranges of the species is highly
skewed, with many local species (86% occurring in 15 or fewer one-degree squares) and very few common ones.
Two species (C. gracilenta and C. grarninifolia) are notably more common than all the others. A comparison of
these species with the others shows that, on average, they have lighter seeds with more bristles, taller scapes and
higher ray/disc ratios, but have smaller capitula. The low geographic abundance of the rare species could not readily
be attributed to any specific reproductive feature, possibly because of the multiple types of rarity represented within
the genus.
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More information
Submitted date: 20 July 2000
Published date: January 2008
Keywords:
dispersibility, mountain daisies, rarity, seed size
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 55679
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/55679
ISSN: 0024-4066
PURE UUID: e94ef476-51ca-4a89-afcb-571f5ddea4c2
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Date deposited: 04 Aug 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:56
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Contributors
Author:
M. Fenner
Author:
W.G. Lee
Author:
E.H. Pinn
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