Lesley Lovett Doust
University of Windsor
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Ecology | 1988
John Lovett Doust; Lesley Lovett Doust
The hypothesis that male-biased sex ratios result from the greater costs of reproduction for females was examined at various modular levels in a study of the dioecious clonal shrub, staghorn sumac (Rhus typhina). The population of flowering trunks was male- biased, though male and female clones proved to be of similar ages. Trunks within apparent female clones were more likely to be vegetative or dead than in male clones, though the density of living plus dead trunks was comparable in male and female clones. Females of given ages had the same mean trunk diameter as similarly aged males. Overall, the average female trunk diameter was the same as the average male diameter. Differential costs and patterns of reproduction for males and females were revealed through destructive harvests and separate analysis of trunks and branches. An abrupt discontinuity in the performance (growth) of male trunks was found; those with a diameter less than 4 cm had greater total numbers of leaves, branches, and inflorescences than females of comparable diameter, whereas larger males and females did not differ from each other. Flowering male branches had significantly fewer leaves than those of flowering females. The number of leaves per branch was highly correlated with the number of fruits produced in the corresponding terminal inflorescence. The average (? SE) male inflorescence had 4099 ? 312 flowers, whereas the average female inflorescence bore 1575 ? 67.2 fruits. There was a sixfold difference in the biomass of these terminal reproductive units (female infructescences being heavier). This study suggests the importance in a clonal species of defining the modular level at which costs are assessed. The hypothesis that females suffer greater reproductive costs as a consequence of fruit production is supported by the finding of diminished survivorship of daughter trunks in female clones. However, it is not supported by data on annual trunk diameter increments. Reproductive costs in sumac are shown at the level of the clone (ramet survivorship) or the branch, rather than at the level of the flowering trunk module.
Ecology | 1987
Lesley Lovett Doust; Jon Lovett Doust
The cost of reproduction by female plants generally exceeds that of male plants because females produce seeds and fruits in addition to flowers (Darwin 1877, Lloyd and Webb 1977, Willson 1983). If the vegetative growth of female and male plants is equivalent, then the greater female reproductive effort should result in reduced growth and/or survival. In a dioecious clonal plant that reduction might be manifest as lower ramet production, and the sex ratio of ramets should become increasingly male-biased. In contrast to this expectation the ramet sex ratio of Rumex acetosella tends to be female-biased (Harris 1968, Putwain and Harper 1972, Lovett Doust and Lovett Doust 1985), even though females allocate a greater proportion of their resources to reproduction than do males (Putwain and Harper 1972). In eight Massachusetts populations of Rumex acetosella, we found one male-biased population and a female bias at the other sites. In these latter seven sites the estimated sex ratio of genets (the genetic individuals) did not differ significantly from 1: 1 (Lovett Doust and Lovett Doust 1985). The greater reproductive effort by female plants, plus the female bias in sex ratio of ramets suggested differential growth by females. Biased sex ratios in clonal plants can be caused by a variety of factors, including, for example, differential grazing by herbivores (see Lovett Doust and Lovett Doust 1985, Agren 1987), sex-associated effects of intraspecific competition (e.g., Onyekwelu and Harper 1979, Lovett Doust et al. 1987), and differences in the numbers of ramets produced and sustained by female and male plants (Sakai and Burris 1985). We have examined and rejected the possibility that differential herbivory on male and female Rumex plants drives the ramet sex ratio to being female-biased. (In fact, although males and females suffered comparable herbivory in absolute terms, the proportion of the available foliage that was removed from females was greater [Lovett Doust and Lovett Doust 1985].) The present study was designed to explore the hypothesis, suggested by David Lloyd (personal communication), that differences in the vegetative vigor and seasonal phonology of males and females might explain the female-biased sex ratios generally found in populations of Rumex acetosella.
Journal of Great Lakes Research | 1994
Lesley Lovett Doust; Jon Lovett Doust; Maciej Biernacki
This paper assesses the value of American wildcelery, Vallisneria americana, as a biomonitor of organochlorine contamination. Plants provide a valuable indicator of local environmental conditions and sub-lethal effects of contaminants on growth and reproduction provide a means of assessing both acute and chronic contaminant effects. In a field survey, Vallisneria plants in the St. Clair and Detroit rivers were found to accumulate significant amounts of organochlorine contaminants, and the concentration increased over the season. Root tissue contained the highest concentrations on each occasion, suggesting contaminant transfer occurred from sediments to the roots. A factorial experiment was set up at two stations in the channel connecting Lakes Huron and Erie to assess the separate effects of contaminant concentrations in the sediment, water column, and source population of the plants, upon growth and reproduction of Vallisneria plants. Contaminant concentrations in sediment and plant tissues were also measured to correlate contaminant content and demographic effects. A clear relationship between exposure to contaminants and effect (on plant performance) was observed. Results indicated that exposure first to the water column, and secondarily to the sediments from the more contaminated site had detrimental effects on plant performance and survival. Plants at each site appeared to be locally adapted and differed in their apparent resistance to organochlorine contaminants. An “impairment index” (reflecting relative plant performance) was calculated and can be used to calibrate the degree of contamination of different sites relative to a “clean” reference site. This may allow prioritization of remediation of contaminated sites, and should allow field managers to track and document the restoration of environmental quality in recognized Areas of Concern in the Great Lakes.
BioScience | 1983
Jon Lovett Doust; Lesley Lovett Doust
Individual higher plants may be male or female to a varying degree. The division of sexual labor leaves the maternal parent in any successful mating bearing the additional cost of nurturing embryos within developing seeds. Patterns of parental sex allocation reflect the evolutionary fitness that may be gained by assuming various gender roles. The evolution of gender separation is discussed. (Accepted for publication 15 August 1982)
Ecoscience | 1995
Ali El-Keblawy; Jon Lovett Doust; Lesley Lovett Doust; Kamal Hussien Shaltout
Gender phenotypes of Thymelaea hirsuta (L.) Endl. were recorded at five natural populations during regular visits occurring 3–6 times per year over a period of 3–6 years. Plant gender was quantifie...
Ecoscience | 1995
Jairie Ferasol; Lesley Lovett Doust; Jon Lovett Doust; Maciej Biernacki
Abstract:Fruits of Vallisneria americana were collected in late September from four sites along the Huron-Erie Corridor, on the Canadian side of this connecting channel between Michigan and Ontario...
Journal of Applied Ecology | 1995
Maciej Biernacki; Jon Lovett Doust; Lesley Lovett Doust
Summary 1. The demographic effects of an organochlorine contaminant on the dioecious aquatic macrophyte Vallisneria americana are reported. Plants were sampled from two natural populations in the Huron-Erie corridor of the Great Lakes Basin, and placed in experimental treatments of high (396 mg per litre), medium (132 mg per litre), low (66 mg per litre) and zero concentrations of trichloroethylene (TCE). Plant responses were determined in terms of genet mortality (i.e. death of the entire genetic individual), ramet production (clonal growth) and mortality, leaf birth- and death rates, leaf area and sexual reproduction. 2. TCE in the water caused significant ramet and genet mortality, and reduced the growth of surviving plants. Control plants produced significantly more leaves than contaminated plants. Contaminant-exposed plants continued producing their leaves for 4-6 weeks longer than controls, and showed greater rates of leaf death. The total leaf area of genets exposed to TCE was significantly lower than that of unexposed plants. TCE was associated with a significant decrease in flower production. 3. The concentration of TCE was determined in plant tissues, water and sediment. Levels of TCE were greatest in the sediment, and sediment originating from each site adsorbed TCE to differing degrees. TCE was more concentrated in the underground storage tissues (roots and turions) than it was in leaves. Root and turion tissues of plants from one site contained significantly less TCE than those of plants from the other site, despite an identical concentration of TCE in the water; differences may have been due to contrasting sediment affinities for TCE, and/or different rates of TCE accumulation by the plants from each site. 4. TCE was bioaccumulated, particularly in roots. This appeared to be attributable to the fact that TCE accumulated, in the first instance, in sediments. The logIo of TCE concentrations in sediment were linearly correlated with TCE concentrations in roots, suggesting that TCE uptake is through the root system rather than the leaves, and that uptake is driven by the concentration gradient between sediment and plant. 5. Plants that survived the TCE treatment appeared to be resistant to the chemical; they were as likely to flower as surviving untreated plants. Males were more likely than females to survive TCE treatment. 6. It is concluded that modular demography can be used to characterize the performance of plants that are stressed by exposure to various concentrations of the organochlorine solvent trichloroethylene, and that plants from different sites differ in their ability to survive contaminant stress.
Journal of Ecology | 1981
Lesley Lovett Doust
Archive | 1988
T. D. Lee; J. Lovett Doust; Lesley Lovett Doust
Journal of Ecology | 1990
Jon Lovett Doust; Lesley Lovett Doust