Closely related species can be used for studying the ecological significance of their traits. The response in terms of survival, clonal growth and vegetative and generative characteristics of three related Myosotis species to competition and soil characteristics were studied in a three year pot experiment. Plants from four populations per species were cultivated in a factorial combination of substrate (nutrient-rich soil and mixtures with sand) and competition (with or without Holcus lanatus) treatments. Survival, clonal growth and the majority of the growth characteristics of all three Myosotis species were reduced by competition. The effect of substrate was less pronounced, and variable for various traits: the soil with sand mixture was more suitable for survival, clonal growth and seed germination whereas in the nutrient-rich soil plants were taller, but this effect was modified by competition. The differences among species corresponded well to expectation based on their known habitat preferences. Myosotis caespitosa, a species typical of short-term habitats such as emerged bottoms of ponds, exhibited the shortest life span and was also the most sensitive to competition: all plants of this species died in the competition treatment before the end of the second season. Nevertheless, the surviving plants (in the no-competition treatment) were able to form several daughter rosettes or stolons; some of them spread clonally till the third year. Myosotis palustris subsp. laxiflora, which inhabits the banks of rivers and brooks often disturbed by torrential floods, survived best and had the highest potential for clonal growth and spreading. Most plants of this species produced rhizomes and stolons and spread the furthest of all the three species. Myosotis nemorosa, which lives mostly in meadows, the most stable habitat of the studied congeners, but also a habitat with a strongly competitive matrix of species, was intermediate in terms of survival, and clonal growth, forming mainly short rhizomes. This species exhibited the highest among-population variability in all recorded characteristics, which might be due to its local adaptation to a wide spectrum of habitats. We argue that the details of prevailing disturbance regime, rather than some general disturbance intensity explain the clonal behaviour of the species compared.
n this study we addressed a question of whether experimental manipulations that increase life span also reduce physical activity and molecular oxidative damage. We used three phenotypes of male and female Pyrrhocoris apterus that survive for different lengths of time, diapausing insects, reproductive insects and insects from which the corpus allatum, the source of juvenile hormone, was surgically removed. Protein carbonyl content of the thoracic muscles was used as an index of molecular oxidative modification. Diapause or ablation of the corpus allatum (allatectomy) was associated with an extended life span of both sexes, but only those individuals that were in diapause were less active. The carbonyl content, both relative (per protein unit) and absolute (per thorax) increased with age in reproductive insects of both sexes. However, the associations between the carbonyl content and diapause and allatectomy differed in males and females. In males, the carbonyl content was not associated with either diapause or allatectomy. There was no age-related increase in the relative and absolute carbonyl levels in diapausing females, while only the increase in the relative carbonyl level was absent in allectomized females. Overall, the results indicate that both allatectomy and diapause prolonged life span, but had different and sex-specific effects on locomotor activity and carbonyl content. Only the extension of the life span of diapausing females was correlated with both reduced locomotor activity and reduced carbonyl content., Marcela Buricova, Magdalena Hodkova., and Obsahuje seznam literatury