Abstract

The significance of maternal and progeny environment to chasmogamy (CH) and cleistogamy (CL) in perennial plants is not well known. The perennial grass Danthonia compressa produces CH spikelets capable of outcrossing on terminal panicles in summer followed by selfing axillary CL spikelets in autumn. This study compared CH and CL seed mass, germination, seedling size, tillering, and reproduction in a sunny woodland edge and shaded interior habitat in the Catskill Mountains of New York State. CL seeds were significantly heavier than CH seeds. Numbers and mass of both seed types were greater in the edge. CL seeds showed much greater germination than CH seeds in both environments during spring, 2018; CL seedlings were larger than CH seedlings in the sunnier habitat. Survival was much greater in the edge than interior and higher for CL seedlings. After 27 months, maternal effects were mostly not detected and there was no significant effect of plant type (CH vs CL) on tiller production, final biomass, or reproduction via CH and CL. For this native grass, non-dispersed CL seeds may be more critical to seedling establishment and population persistence due to greater mass and germinability, and better plant survival, relative to smaller, dispersible CH seeds.

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