2019
DOI: 10.3390/d11100187
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Age-Independent Adult Mortality in a Long-Lived Herb

Abstract: Relative to mammals and birds, little is known about the mortality trajectories of perennial plants, as there are few long-term demographic studies following multiple yearly cohorts from birth to death. This is particularly important because if reproductively mature individuals show actuarial senescence, current estimations of life spans assuming constant survival would be incorrect. There is also a lack of studies documenting how life history trade-offs and disturbance influence the mortality trajectories of … Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
(67 reference statements)
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“…This also requires sampling of the oldest part of the shrub to obtain the maximum age estimation for each individual. Additionally, shrub mortality across life stages could be quantified, by, e.g., long-term monitoring of individuals in permanent plots (such as with a long-lived herb in (Edelfeldt et al, 2019)) or systematically collecting dead shrubs and dating their year of death by using dendroecology or radio-carbon dating of their outermost ring (cf. (Pizano et al, 2014).…”
Section: Steps Forward: Adjust Sampling Strategies To Obtain Demograp...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This also requires sampling of the oldest part of the shrub to obtain the maximum age estimation for each individual. Additionally, shrub mortality across life stages could be quantified, by, e.g., long-term monitoring of individuals in permanent plots (such as with a long-lived herb in (Edelfeldt et al, 2019)) or systematically collecting dead shrubs and dating their year of death by using dendroecology or radio-carbon dating of their outermost ring (cf. (Pizano et al, 2014).…”
Section: Steps Forward: Adjust Sampling Strategies To Obtain Demograp...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most of the established plants included in the study in 1985 were still alive in 2018. A previous study with this species found that the life expectancy for 10‐year‐old plants was between 27 and 50 years (Edelfeldt et al., 2019). The genus is favoured by moderate grazing and initial phases of overgrowth but performance deteriorates at later stages of overgrowth (DiLeo et al., 2017; Hensen et al., 2005; Kalliovirta et al., 2006; Lindell, 2001, 2007; Walker & Pinches, 2011).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…However, recent research indicates that age also matters and that there is substantial variation in how age affects vital rates such as survival, reproduction and growth (Edelfeldt, Bengtsson, et al., 2019; Roach & Smith, 2020). In some species, survival shows no significant relationship with age or may increase towards higher ages (Edelfeldt, Lindell, et al., 2019; Garcia et al., 2011; Hutchings, 2010) while other species show a significant decrease in survival with age, that is, actuarial senescence (Dahlgren et al., 2016; Picó & Retana, 2008; Roach et al., 2009). Similarly, diverse relationships have been documented between reproduction and age in polycarpic species (i.e.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%