1994
DOI: 10.2307/3243475
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

The Evolution of Asexual Reproduction in Plants

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1

Citation Types

2
27
1
2

Year Published

2001
2001
2019
2019

Publication Types

Select...
7
1

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 56 publications
(32 citation statements)
references
References 0 publications
2
27
1
2
Order By: Relevance
“…Lejeunea phyllobola, Plagiochila raddiana, and including representatives of the genera Syrrhopodon and Calymperes). It is known that asexual structures can help guarantee the maintenance of populations at local scales, principally when environmental factors are unfavorable to sexual reproduction, which requires conditions of greater humidity (Newton & Mishler 1994;Longton 1997;Glime & Bisang 2007). Clonal reproduction by dioicous species contributes to the segregation of male and female gametophytes, and the frequent creation of unisexual colonies -which tends to make fertilization more difficult (McLetchie & Puterbaugh 2000;Bisang & Hedenäs 2005).…”
Section: Reproductive Aspectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lejeunea phyllobola, Plagiochila raddiana, and including representatives of the genera Syrrhopodon and Calymperes). It is known that asexual structures can help guarantee the maintenance of populations at local scales, principally when environmental factors are unfavorable to sexual reproduction, which requires conditions of greater humidity (Newton & Mishler 1994;Longton 1997;Glime & Bisang 2007). Clonal reproduction by dioicous species contributes to the segregation of male and female gametophytes, and the frequent creation of unisexual colonies -which tends to make fertilization more difficult (McLetchie & Puterbaugh 2000;Bisang & Hedenäs 2005).…”
Section: Reproductive Aspectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Vários estudos efetuados em diferentes espécies e épocas trataram da propagação vegetativa em briófitas, podendo-se citar Fulford (1944), Mishler (1988), Schuster (1988), Kimmerer (1991, Newton & Mishler (1994), Reiner-Drehwald (1994, Reese (1997Reese ( , 2001a, Laaka-Lindberg (1999 A ocorrência de reprodução vegetativa está amplamente distribuída entre diversos táxons de Lejeuneaceae, os quais nem sempre estreitamente relacionados, e vários autores, incluindo Schuster (1980Schuster ( , 2000 referem os processos de reprodução vegetativa como um critério taxonômico. A não observação de reprodução vegetativa em um dado táxon, não implica que ela não possa ocorrer, sob determinadas condições ou ambientes.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified
“…Vários estudos efetuados em diferentes espécies e épocas trataram da propagação vegetativa em briófitas, podendo-se citar Fulford (1944), Mishler (1988), Schuster (1988), Kimmerer (1991Kimmerer ( , 1994, Newton & Mishler (1994), Reiner-Drehwald (1994), Reese (1997Reese ( , 2001a, Laaka-Lindberg (1999, Martin (2001), Roads & Longton (2003), Nordhorn-Richter (2004) e Pfeiffer et al (2006). Dentre esses, Fulford (1994) tratou especificamente de Ceratolejeunea Jack & Steph., um membro da família Lejeuneaceae.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified
“…The topics of population dynamics and life history evolution of bryophytes have, however, been dealt with in a number of recent studies on mosses (e.g. Newton and Mishler 1994, Økland 1995, Hedderson and Longton 1995, Longton 1997, Rydgren et al 1998). The few studies on population ecology of leafy hepatics include those by Jonsson andSö derströ m (1988, Sö derströ m andJonsson 1989) on Ptilidium pulcherrimum, and Laaka-Lindberg (1999) on Lophozia sil6icola.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Upon germination, a new juvenile shoot develops on a short protonemal tube in a similar fashion as in germinating spores, and this warrants the use of the concept of ''asexual reproduction'' in gemmiferous hepatics (see Mogie 1992). In species with facultative reproductive modes, sexual and asexual reproduction have different ecological and evolutionary roles (Newton and Mishler 1994), and in species inhabiting a system of habitat patches, randomly varying within-patch fitnesses favour propensity for both dispersal and dormancy (McPeek and Kalisz 1998).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%