| 要旨トップ | 本企画の概要 | | 日本生態学会第67回全国大会 (2020年3月、名古屋) 講演要旨 ESJ67 Abstract |
シンポジウム S28-3 (Presentation in Symposium)
The elasticity of population growth rate is a notable statistic in matrix population models and has been used by many empirical researchers. Silvertown and his collaborators published a paper in 1996 in which they mapped elasticity vectors of stasis, growth and fecundity for 84 plant species in a ternary plot and reported that the elasticity vector distribution of semelparous species was located in the upper-left region of the ternary plot. To understand and clarify why the elasticity vectors of semelparous species were distributed in the upper-left region, we conducted two analyses. First, we used 68 matrices of semelparous species populations in the COMPADRE Plant Matrix Database and 3000 randomly generated population projection matrices. Second, we examined the evolutionary change in the distribution using a population projection matrix model in which the trade-off between fecundity and adult survival was incorporated. The evolutionary trajectory derived from the trade-off model showed that the evolutionary consequence of semelparity was located in the upper-left more than was that of iteroparity in the ternary plot. Synthesizing the results, we concluded that the distinctive distribution of the elasticity vectors of semelparous species is the outcome of natural selection under the trade-off with low convexity.