Resource Translocation Modelling Highlights Density-Dependence Effects in Fruit Production at Various Levels of Organisation
Résumé
The size of fruit cells, seeds and fruits depends on their number. Could this density-dependence effect result from sugar resource sharing and, if so, does it involve phloem sugar flow or the intensity of sugar unloading to the sink? A density-dependence model (DDM) describing these processes was designed and parameterised for six species at five levels of organisation: cells and seeds within fruits, fruits within clusters, fruits within plants and plants within plots. Sugar flow was driven by phloem conductance, determined by parameters α , governing the shape of its relationship to population size, and κ , its value for a population size of one. Sugar unloading followed Michaelis–Menten kinetics with parameters V m (maximal unloading rate) and K m (Michaelis constant). The DDM effectively reproduced the observed individual mass dynamics, the undercompensating density dependence observed in most species at all sub-plant levels and the undercompensating, exact and overcompensating density dependence observed at the plant level. Conductance ( κ ) was a scaling factor varying with the level of organisation. V m was positively correlated with density dependence, and α was negatively correlated with density dependence only if the plant-within-plot level was not considered. Analysis of the model’s behaviour indicates that density dependence of fruit growth could be a result of sugar sharing, and that both phloem sugar flow and sugar unloading contribute to these effects.
Domaines
Génétique des plantesOrigine | Fichiers éditeurs autorisés sur une archive ouverte |
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