Abstract

Flower preformation is a widespread phenomenon in perennial plants from temperate and cold regions. An advanced preformation status reduces the prefloration period and thus increases the chance to mature seeds in time. Despite the particular importance of this strategy for high-mountain plants, studies are rare. Here we investigated how the length of the growing season impacts floral development, and to what extent floral development is synchronized with reproductive phenophases in the arctic-alpine species Ranunculus glacialis L. The study was carried out in the alpine-nival ecotone in the European Central Alps at sites with different snowmelt dates. Individuals were sampled at regular intervals throughout the growing season, and shoot architecture and changes in floral structures were analysed in detail using different microscopic techniques. R. glacialis individuals consist of a cluster of independent ramets, comprising 3 sympodia each. Floral initiation terminates the vegetative growth of each sympodium 2–3 years before flowers become functional. A specific feature is that basal and distal leaves on a sympodium mature in different years. The date of snowmelt did not affect the speed of development but flower size and the number of lateral flowers within an inflorescence. Belowground floral preformation is closely linked to aboveground reproductive processes, however, continues below the snow in case winter conditions set in too early. The staggered preformation of architectural units creates a permanent belowground reserve pool of floral structures which might be advantageous in the climatically harsh and unpredictable high-mountain environment.

Highlights

  • Flower preformation, i.e. flowers are initiated one or more years before anthesis, is a widespread phenomenon in perennial plants from temperate and cold regions

  • The shoot consists of successive sympodia, each terminating in a uni- or multiflorous inflorescence (Fig. 1)

  • Each sympodium derives from the axillary meristem of the leaf at the basis of the inflorescence of the previous sympodium

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Summary

Introduction

I.e. flowers are initiated one or more years before anthesis, is a widespread phenomenon in perennial plants from temperate and cold regions. The high-mountain plants studied up to date mainly show a two-season strategy of flower preformation, i.e. flower primordia are initiated in the season before anthesis Few species follow a one-season strategy, i.e. they initiate and develop the flowers in the year of anthesis. Among these species are Saxifraga caesia (inhabits only the alpine zone) and the subnival-nival species Cerastium uniflorum (Wagner et al 2012). A multi-season strategy in alpine plants has been reported for Acomastylis rossii (Meloche and Diggle 2001) and Polygonum viviparum (Diggle 1997) so far

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