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Evolution of life history strategies in Lophoziaceae

This study used data from literature and data from the field to analyse the patterns of variation in life history characters among members of the liverwort family Lophoziaceae. A combination of Principal Component and Cluster analyses was used to analyse data from literature in testing for recurrent...

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Main Author: Manyanga, Phelex
Other Authors: Hedderson, T
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Manyanga, Phelex
author2 Hedderson, T
author_browse Hedderson, T
Manyanga, Phelex
author_facet Hedderson, T
Manyanga, Phelex
author_sort Manyanga, Phelex
collection Thesis
description This study used data from literature and data from the field to analyse the patterns of variation in life history characters among members of the liverwort family Lophoziaceae. A combination of Principal Component and Cluster analyses was used to analyse data from literature in testing for recurrent suites of life history variation among species of the family. Data from literature were also used to examine the relationship between mode of reproduction and reproductive system (sexuality) and between diaspore (spore or gemma) frequency and sexuality. Data from the field were used to establish diaspore (spore and gemma) sizes and their production per capsule or shoot and to test for relationships between diaspore size and production per shoot/capsule and also between diaspore sizes and proportion of germination. The study showed the existence of recurrent suites of life history variation in the family. The clusters produced were shown to be independent of the species' phylogeny, but were closely related to the habitat parameters such as nature of substrate, duration of habitat availability and moisture condition. The study also shows dominance of dioicous species in the family, with about 90% of the studied species being dioicous. There is a statistically significant relationship between reproductive system and sporophyte frequency; monoicous species produce sporophytes more frequently than dioicous species. A negative relationship was shown to generally exist between spore size and number of spores produced per capsule at both species and population levels. However, no relationship could be established between gemma size and the number of gemmae produced per shoot. For two of the studied species, L. ciliata and L. /ongiflora, there was a general positive relationship between spore size and proportion of germination, with bigger spores having higher germination proportions. L ventricosa showed a negative relationship between spore size and germinability.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:18.917Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39953 Evolution of life history strategies in Lophoziaceae Manyanga, Phelex Hedderson, T Soderstrom, L Biological Sciences This study used data from literature and data from the field to analyse the patterns of variation in life history characters among members of the liverwort family Lophoziaceae. A combination of Principal Component and Cluster analyses was used to analyse data from literature in testing for recurrent suites of life history variation among species of the family. Data from literature were also used to examine the relationship between mode of reproduction and reproductive system (sexuality) and between diaspore (spore or gemma) frequency and sexuality. Data from the field were used to establish diaspore (spore and gemma) sizes and their production per capsule or shoot and to test for relationships between diaspore size and production per shoot/capsule and also between diaspore sizes and proportion of germination. The study showed the existence of recurrent suites of life history variation in the family. The clusters produced were shown to be independent of the species' phylogeny, but were closely related to the habitat parameters such as nature of substrate, duration of habitat availability and moisture condition. The study also shows dominance of dioicous species in the family, with about 90% of the studied species being dioicous. There is a statistically significant relationship between reproductive system and sporophyte frequency; monoicous species produce sporophytes more frequently than dioicous species. A negative relationship was shown to generally exist between spore size and number of spores produced per capsule at both species and population levels. However, no relationship could be established between gemma size and the number of gemmae produced per shoot. For two of the studied species, L. ciliata and L. /ongiflora, there was a general positive relationship between spore size and proportion of germination, with bigger spores having higher germination proportions. L ventricosa showed a negative relationship between spore size and germinability. 2024-06-19T08:55:12Z 2024-06-19T08:55:12Z 2007 2024-06-19T08:46:04Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39953 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Biological Sciences
Manyanga, Phelex
Evolution of life history strategies in Lophoziaceae
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Evolution of life history strategies in Lophoziaceae
title_full Evolution of life history strategies in Lophoziaceae
title_fullStr Evolution of life history strategies in Lophoziaceae
title_full_unstemmed Evolution of life history strategies in Lophoziaceae
title_short Evolution of life history strategies in Lophoziaceae
title_sort evolution of life history strategies in lophoziaceae
topic Biological Sciences
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39953
work_keys_str_mv AT manyangaphelex evolutionoflifehistorystrategiesinlophoziaceae