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Optimal biomass allocation in heterogeneous environments in a clonal plant - Spatial division of labor

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Abstract

  • For specialization, allocating the largest biomass to organs growing under a resource rich condition while allocating least biomass to organs under a resource poor condition could be profitable, but empirical studies showed those allocation patterns are hardly to be observed. To evaluate the degree of specialization of DoL, we constructed a simple plant growth model in sets of two ramets, physiologically interconnected or independent, growing in different environments. The model is designed to determine an optimal biomass allocation and an optimal water transport within a ramet. The model also maximizes total biomass acquisition for connected ramets. In our model, the degree of specialization of ramets is determined by the interplay among the costs of water transport, the contrast in resource availability and the efficiency of resource capturing per unit biomass. If two ramets growing independently then each ramet allocates biomass to the organ that captures the locally scarce resource and two ramets achieve a lower biomass in a patch with a higher contrast in resource availabilities. The interconnected two ramets showed DoL if the benefit through the DoL is larger than the costs of water transportation. Interconnected ramets showed DoL if the benefit of DoL is greater than the costs of water transport. When interconnected ramets show DoL, each ramet allocates biomass to the organ that captures the locally abundant resource and the pair achieves higher total biomass in patches with a higher contrast in resource availabilities. The degree of specialization increases as the contrast in resource availabilities increases, and full specialization occurs when the contrast is high. We also find that the efficiencies in resource capturing per unit biomass of each organ are important. When an organ of a ramet reaches a larger size, the efficiencies in resource capturing per unit biomass decreases. A small organ growing under low resource conditions may capture more resources per unit biomass than a large organ growing under high resource conditions; as a result the modeled plant also allocates biomass to the organ growing under low resource conditions.

Publication Date

  • 2008

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