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The Evolution of Annual and Perennial Plant Life Histories: Ecological Correlates and Genetic Mechanisms

Jannice Friedman

2020Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics216 citationsDOI

Abstract

Flowering plants exhibit two principal life-history strategies: annuality (living and reproducing in one year) and perenniality (living more than one year). The advantages of either strategy depend on the relative benefits of immediate reproduction balanced against survivorship and future reproduction. This trade-off means that life-history strategies are associated with particular environments, with annuals being found more often in unpredictable habitats. Annuality and perenniality are the outcome of developmental genetic programs responding to their environment, with perennials being distinguished by their delayed competence to flower and reversion to growth after flowering. Evolutionary transitions between these strategies are frequent and have consequences for mating systems and genome evolution, with perennials being more likely to outcross with higher inbreeding depression and lower rates of molecular evolution. Integrating expectations from life-history theory with knowledge of the developmental genetics of flowering and seasonality is required to understand the mechanisms involved in the evolution of annual and perennial life histories.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyPerennial plantInbreeding depressionSemelparity and iteroparityEcologyOutcrossingLife history theorySurvivorship curveEvolutionary ecologyReproductionInbreedingDemographyLife historyPopulationHost (biology)GeneticsSociologyPollenCancerPlant and animal studiesPlant Reproductive BiologyPlant Molecular Biology Research
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