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  • Blackwell Science, Ltd  (1)
  • 2000-2004  (1)
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  • 2000-2004  (1)
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  • 1
    ISSN: 1365-3040
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Field experiments in managed grassland have shown that the response of vegetative growth to elevated CO2 is nitrogen-dependent in grasses, but independent in N2-fixing legumes. In the present study, we tested whether this is also true for reproduction. We evaluated reproductive growth, flowering phenology, seed development, reproductive success and seed germination in the grass Lolium perenne L. and the legume Trifolium repens L., growing in monocultures in a free air carbon dioxide enrichment (FACE) system at ambient (35 Pa) and elevated (60 Pa) partial pressure of CO2 and two levels of nitrogen fertilization (14 and 56 g N m−2 a−1). In both species, elevated CO2 had no significant effect on sexual reproduction. In L. perenne, reproduction was mainly nitrogen-dependent. The weak interactions between CO2 and mineral N supply (13% more flowers and 8% more grains per spike at high N, 7% less flowers and 8% less grains at low N) were not significant. Under elevated CO2, grain maturation was slightly enhanced and grain weight tended to decrease. No influence could be ascertained in the date of anthesis, the temporal pattern of grain growth, the rate of grain abortion and germination. Trifolium repens, grown under CO2 enrichment at both levels of N fertilization, flowered 10 d earlier, tended to form more inflorescences per ground area and more flowers (8–12%) and seeds (〉18%) per inflorescence than at ambient CO2. The temporal pattern of seed growth was about the same in all treatments; embryo development, however, was accelerated in fumigated plants. The number of aborted seeds per pod, seed size, thousand-seed weight and germinability did not show any influence of CO2. Fumigated plants at high N were attacked slightly more frequently by seed-eating weevils, which lowered the seed output per pod. In summary, the reproductive response of L. perenne and T. repens to CO2 enrichment on the flower and inflorescence level was far weaker than expected from the results on vegetative growth.
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