How to translate text using browser tools
1 December 2008 Habitat and Reproduction of Dirca mexicana (Thymelaeaceae)
William R. Graves
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Little is known about the single reported population of Dirca mexicana. I monitored air temperature from mid-2005 through mid-2007, analyzed pH of soil, used the global positioning system (GPS) to define geographical boundaries of the population, explored for additional populations, and studied aspects of sexual and asexual reproduction in situ and among seedlings in greenhouses. Temperature ranged from −2 to 35.5°C, and weekly means were 7.4 to 18.1°C. Soil pH was 6.3. No other populations were found at sites nearby with similar slopes and aspects, but a second distinct cluster of plants was found 221 m from the portion of the known population described previously. Numerous individuals of Catasticta nimbice nimbice, a butterfly in the family Pieridae, visited flowers in mid-March, 2007. Drupes were observed in May four of five years, and drupe count per plant was 3 to 131 among individuals with basal trunk diameters of 10 to 46 mm in 2007. Genetic analysis of 45 individuals revealed no putative clones. Drupes of D. mexicana were longer and wider than those of the other two species in the genus, while size of seeds was intermediate. Seedlings isolated from pollinators in a greenhouse flowered for the first time and formed viable seeds during their fourth spring of development, demonstrating the capacity of D. mexicana to self-pollinate or to form seeds via apomixis. These observations improve our understanding of the habitat and reproductive biology of this endemic species.

William R. Graves "Habitat and Reproduction of Dirca mexicana (Thymelaeaceae)," Rhodora 110(944), 365-378, (1 December 2008). https://doi.org/10.3119/07-21.1
Published: 1 December 2008
KEYWORDS
endemic plants
leatherwood
reproductive biology
Thymelaeaceae
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top