Vivipary in cuban cacti and an assessment of establishment success in Leptocereus scopulophilus

Angel Garcia-Beltran, Jose; Barrios, Duniel; Roberto Gonzalez-Torres, Luis; Cuza, Alina; Toledo, Sandy

Abstract

Vivipary is the germination of a seed inside of a fruit before it is separated from the mother plant. In the present study, the populations of several Cuban cactus species are explored in search of vivipary and Leptocereus scopulophilus is used as a model species to evaluate the effectiveness of vivipary in the establishment of offspring. Vivipary is a relatively common phenomenon in Cuban cacti from different ecosystems with variable temperature, rainfall and salinity, whose frequencies of population vivipary and average of viviparous seedlings per fruit are usually low. In L. scopulophilus, vivipary does not constitute a more efficient reproductive strategy that favors establishment, which is typically the limiting factor for the perpetuation of viviparous species. On the other hand, viviparous seedlings will be favored in environments with high levels of humidity and availability of safe sites, which are sporadic in semiarid environments.

Más información

Título según WOS: Vivipary in cuban cacti and an assessment of establishment success in Leptocereus scopulophilus
Título según SCOPUS: Vivipary in cuban cacti and an assessment of establishment success in Leptocereus scopulophilus
Título de la Revista: Journal of Arid Environments
Volumen: 184
Editorial: Academic Press
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1016/j.jaridenv.2020.104322

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS