Variation in the Eucalyptus gunnii-archeri complex. III. Reciprocal transplant trials
Two multicharacter clines in the more or less continuous stands of Eucalyptus gunnii-archeri on the Central Plateau, Tasmania, are genetically based and appear to parallel independent habitat gradients. Data suggest that these clines are at least partly maintained by spatially varying selective forces. Spatial variation in population fitness could be partly attributed to a differential response to drought, frost and insect predation.
Most characters associated with extension growth exhibited marked phenotypic plasticity. In contrast, several characters of taxonomic importance in the complex, and which vary markedly between populations (eg seedling leaf shape, glaucousness), exhibited little environmental modification. The ontogenetic pattern varied between populations and, for many characters, the direction of environmental modification was the same as the direction of genetic differentiation.
History
Publication title
Australian Journal of BotanyVolume
33Issue
6Pagination
687-704ISSN
0067-1924Department/School
School of Natural SciencesPublisher
CSIRO PublicationsPlace of publication
Collingwood, AustraliaRights statement
Copyright 1985 CSIRORepository Status
- Open