Data from: Drivers of vegetative dormancy across herbaceous perennial plant species
Vegetative dormancy, that is the temporary absence of aboveground growth for ≥ 1 year, is paradoxical, because plants cannot photosynthesise or flower during dormant periods. We test ecological and evolutionary hypotheses for its widespread persistence. We show that dormancy has evolved numerous tim...
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Zusammenfassung: | Vegetative dormancy, that is the temporary absence of aboveground growth
for ≥ 1 year, is paradoxical, because plants cannot photosynthesise or
flower during dormant periods. We test ecological and evolutionary
hypotheses for its widespread persistence. We show that dormancy has
evolved numerous times. Most species displaying dormancy exhibit
life‐history costs of sprouting, and of dormancy. Short‐lived and
mycoheterotrophic species have higher proportions of dormant plants than
long‐lived species and species with other nutritional modes. Foliage loss
is associated with higher future dormancy levels, suggesting that carbon
limitation promotes dormancy. Maximum dormancy duration is shorter under
higher precipitation and at higher latitudes, the latter suggesting an
important role for competition or herbivory. Study length affects
estimates of some demographic parameters. Our results identify life
historical and environmental drivers of dormancy. We also highlight the
evolutionary importance of the little understood costs of sprouting and
growth, latitudinal stress gradients and mixed nutritional modes. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.m543580 |