Seed predation by yucca moths on semelparous, iteroparous and vegetatively reproducing subspecies of Yucca whipplei (Agavaceae)

American Midland Naturalist
By: , and 

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Abstract

Yucca whipplei subspecies are distinguished by differences in reproduction: spp. whipplei and ssp. parishii are semelparous, flowering once and dying; ssp. caespitosa is iteroparous, producing multiple rosettes which may flower in different years; ssp. percursa has clonal reproduction from rhizomes, and ssp. intermedia is intermediate to the latter two. Seed loss due to the symbiotic yucca moth Tegeticula maculata was not evenly distributed among subspecies, nor was such predation correlated with the mode of reproduction. Rather, the number of moth larvae per capsule was significantly negatively correlated with distance from the coast and average annual temperature. The number of larvae per capsule varied from 0-14. All subspecies had a percentage of fruits lacking larvae; this percentage was largest in the two semelparous subspecies where nearly half of their fruits were without larvae. There is some evidence that this is the result of egg or larval mortality early in development. Within an inflorescence, larvae in individuals of some subspecies showed a highly clumped dispersion and others a highly uniform dispersion.

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Seed predation by yucca moths on semelparous, iteroparous and vegetatively reproducing subspecies of Yucca whipplei (Agavaceae)
Series title American Midland Naturalist
DOI 10.2307/2425831
Volume 115
Issue 1
Year Published 1986
Language English
Publisher University of Notre Dame
Contributing office(s) Western Ecological Research Center
Description 9 p.
First page 1
Last page 9
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