Re: [aroid-l] How does A. titanum do it?


In a message dated 9/12/2002 7:22:33 PM Pacific Daylight Time, 
callen@fairchildgarden.org writes:


> The conclusion of the conversation with my friend was that it seemed rather
> odd that a species (or many) had evolved into such a precarious corner!
> 

In a stable environment, they can get away with it.  Once it destabilizes, 
they find themselves a dead end.  Usually generalists, not specialists, are 
the founders of the great evolutionary radiations.

In the absence of large-scale disturbance (including human activity), each 
plant need only replace itself, producing one surviving offspring in the 
course of its life.  In the presence of such disturbance, when part of the 
population is destroyed, then those species with higher reproductive rates 
flourish (i.e., each plant surviving the upheaval replaces both itself and 
one or more of those lost).

Jason Hernandez
Naturalist-at-Large



Other Mailing lists | Author Index | Date Index | Subject Index | Thread Index