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Some implications of plant size in monotypic and polytypic populations of Fucus spiralis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 April 2000

G.W. Scott
Affiliation:
School of Sciences and Management, University College Scarborough, Filey Road, Scarborough, YO11 3AZEngland
J.H. Shaw
Affiliation:
School of Sciences and Management, University College Scarborough, Filey Road, Scarborough, YO11 3AZEngland
S.L. Hull
Affiliation:
School of Sciences and Management, University College Scarborough, Filey Road, Scarborough, YO11 3AZEngland
C. Pickaert
Affiliation:
School of Sciences and Management, University College Scarborough, Filey Road, Scarborough, YO11 3AZEngland
A.M. Burlak
Affiliation:
School of Sciences and Management, University College Scarborough, Filey Road, Scarborough, YO11 3AZEngland

Abstract

Plant size and aspects of the reproductive potential of monotypic and polytypic populations of Fucus spiralis and Fucus spiralis forma nanus were compared. The two formae were distinct, but the differences between them were less pronounced where they co-occurred, suggesting the possibility of a level of inter-forma gene flow. Fucus spiralis f. nanus plants pay a potential reproductive cost in that they produce smaller eggs than F. spiralis, but the two formae appear to have similar levels of total reproductive output (eggs per unit of receptacle tissue).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2000 Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom

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