Abstract

Saxifraga bryoides L. is an abundant species in the subnival and nival zone of the European mountains. First flowering occurs, at the earliest, 6 weeks after snowmelt. This is a remarkably long prefloration period in an environment with a short growing season. To gain more information about the developmental strategies of this species, the timing and the dynamics of flower bud formation and vegetative shoot growth were studied at sites with growing seasons of different lengths at two subnival locations (2650 and 2880 m a.s.l.) in the Tyrolean Alps. At an early, mid and late thawing site, individuals emerging from the winter snow were labelled. Reproductive and vegetative shoots were sampled at regular intervals throughout the growing season and analysed, using different microscopic techniques. Flower buds of S. bryoides develop in three cohorts. Provided the growing season is long enough, cohorts 1 and 2 come into flower, whereas cohort 3 buds remain primordial and continue to develop after winter. New flower primordia appear as day-length decreases from August on, which suggests a short-day requirement for floral initiation. At the end of the growing season, flower buds of different stages are present, but only primordial stages survive winter. Thus, flower buds of S. bryoides develop largely or even completely in the year of anthesis. Developmental dynamics were quite similar at the different sites. Time from flower initiation until anthesis took about 2 months, independently of whether flowers were formed within one or two seasons. All of the leaves on vegetative short-stem shoots turnover within a growing season. Leaves having passed winter continuously decline and are replaced by newly formed ones (21±3 at the mid-thawing site and 18±1 leaves at the short-season site). An individual leaf functions therefore, on average, about 12 months. In most years the seed crop of S. bryoides results mainly from the first cohort of flowers in an individual. In a changing climate with a prolonged growing season, the chance of two cohorts to develop mature seeds from flower cohorts 1 and 2 would increase.

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