1992
DOI: 10.1086/417659
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The Dilemma of Plants: To Grow or Defend

Abstract: Physiological and ecological constraints play key roles in the evolution of plant growth patterns, especially in relation to defenses against herbivores. Phenotypic and life history theories are unified within the growth-differentiation balance (GDB) framework, forming an integrated system of theories explaining and predicting patterns of plant defense and competitive interactions in ecological and evolutionary time. Plant activity at the cellular level can be classified as growth (cell division and enlargemen… Show more

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Cited by 3,517 publications
(3,371 citation statements)
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References 613 publications
(790 reference statements)
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“…The amount of exudation was not affected by nutrient shortage. Since a shortage of nutrients may slow the growth rate and increase the amount of secondary metabolites (Herms and Mattson, 1992) our result suggests that a diminished need of phlorotannins for cell-wall construction would not lead to an increase in their exudation. The amount of exudation may be relatively independent of the growth rate, for instance if exudation also takes place in the old, nongrowing thallus that comprises a major part of the algal biomass.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The amount of exudation was not affected by nutrient shortage. Since a shortage of nutrients may slow the growth rate and increase the amount of secondary metabolites (Herms and Mattson, 1992) our result suggests that a diminished need of phlorotannins for cell-wall construction would not lead to an increase in their exudation. The amount of exudation may be relatively independent of the growth rate, for instance if exudation also takes place in the old, nongrowing thallus that comprises a major part of the algal biomass.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…Resource-based hypotheses assume that under conditions of good nutrient availability, the allocation of carbon will shift from the production of secondary metabolites to growth (e.g., Bryant et al, 1983;Herms and Mattson, 1992). Often, negative correlations have been found between the contents of available nutrients and the production of soluble phenolic compounds, both in terrestrial plants (reviewed by Herms and Mattson, 1992) and brown algae, although much spatial and temporal variation in this relationship exists (e.g., Yates and Peckol, 1993;Steinberg, 1995;Peckol et al, 1996;Pavia and Toth, 2000b). Variation in the contents of soluble phlorotannins has also been found among different parts of algae.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the effects of elevated atmospheric CO 2 on plant physiological processes has long been studied, the combined effects of elevated temperature and CO 2 are only poorly known. The growth-differentiation balance model of plant development suggests elevated CO 2 may generally increase carbon partitioning to secondary metabolites like phenyl propanoids because it typically increases plant source strength (rates of photosynthate accumulation) more than sink strength (Herms and Mattson, 1992;Mattson et al, 2005). However, the effects of elevated temperature are much less predictable because it is not fully obvious how that will simultaneously influence both source and sink processes and thus the crucial source-sink carbon balance over plant development.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If plant sink (growth) processes are more sensitive to ameliorative changes in temperature than is photosynthesis (Mattson and Haack, 1987a,b;Herms and Mattson, 1992), then the plant's source-sink balance may generally decline with rising temperatures because sink demands will outpace source supplies. This could lead to reduced carbon partitioning to facultative secondary metabolism.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Plants simultaneously acquire different resources, mate, and also defend. While they certainly encounter tradeoffs among these various activities [58,59], their redundant construction allows them to accomplish more tasks simultaneously than animals.…”
Section: Morphological and Evolutionary Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%