Abstract

Summary1. To test whether clonal macrophytes can select favourable habitats in heterogeneous environments, clonal fragments of the stoloniferous submerged macrophyte Vallisneria spiralis were subjected to conditions in which light intensity and substratum nutrients were patchily distributed. The allocation of biomass accumulation and ramet production of clones to the different patches was examined.2. The proportion of both biomass and ramet number of clones allocated to rich patches was significantly higher than in poor patches. The greatest values of both clone and leaf biomass were produced in the heterogeneous light treatment, in which clones originally grew from light‐rich to light‐poor patches, while clones produced the most offspring ramets in the treatments with heterogeneous substratum nutrients. Similarly, root biomass had the highest values in nutrient‐rich patches when clones grew from nutrient‐rich to nutrient‐poor patches.3. The quality of patches in which parent ramets established significantly influenced the foraging pattern. When previously established in rich patches, a higher proportion of biomass was allocated to rich patches, whereas a higher proportion of ramet number was allocated to rich patches when previously established in poor patches.4. Results demonstrate that the clonal macrophyte V. spiralis can exhibit foraging in submerged heterogeneous environments: when established under resource‐rich conditions V. spiralis remained in favourable patches, whereas if established in adverse conditions it could escape by allocating more ramets to favourable patches.

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