Tolerance to competition has been hypothesized to reduce the negative impact of plant-plant competition on fitness. Although competitive interactions are a strong selective force, an analysis of net selection on tolerance to competition is absent in the literature. Using fifty-five full/half-sibling families from 18 maternal lines in the crop weed Ipomoea purpurea we measured fitness and putative tolerance traits when grown with and without competition in an agricultural field. We tested for the presence of genetic variation for tolerance to competition and determined if there were costs and benefits of this trait. We also assessed correlations between tolerance and potential tolerance traits. We uncovered a fitness benefit of tolerance in ...
Strong human-mediated selection via herbicide application in agroecosystems has repeatedly led to th...
Although plants are generally attacked by a community of several species of herbivores, relatively l...
Trait differences among plants are expected to influence the outcome of competition; competition sho...
Tolerance to competition has been hypothesized to reduce the negative impact of plant-plant competit...
Fitness costs are frequently invoked to explain the presence of genetic variation underlying plant d...
abstract: Tolerance to herbivory minimizes the effects of herbivory on plant fitness. In the presenc...
Although fitness costs associated with plant defensive traits are widely expected, they are not univ...
Abstract. Defense costs provide a major explanation for why plants in nature have not evolved to be ...
Although a central assumption of most plant-defense theories is that resistance is costly, fitness c...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/134117/1/evo13016_am.pdfhttp://deepblue...
Human-mediated selection can strongly influence the evolutionary response of natural organisms withi...
The evolution of plant defence in response to herbivory will depend on the fitness effects of damage...
Upon introduction to new continents, invading species encounter novel communities of consumers, path...
Both theoretical and empirical works have highlighted the difference in the evolutionary implication...
Strong human-mediated selection via herbicide application in agroecosystems has repeatedly led to th...
Although plants are generally attacked by a community of several species of herbivores, relatively l...
Trait differences among plants are expected to influence the outcome of competition; competition sho...
Tolerance to competition has been hypothesized to reduce the negative impact of plant-plant competit...
Fitness costs are frequently invoked to explain the presence of genetic variation underlying plant d...
abstract: Tolerance to herbivory minimizes the effects of herbivory on plant fitness. In the presenc...
Although fitness costs associated with plant defensive traits are widely expected, they are not univ...
Abstract. Defense costs provide a major explanation for why plants in nature have not evolved to be ...
Although a central assumption of most plant-defense theories is that resistance is costly, fitness c...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/134117/1/evo13016_am.pdfhttp://deepblue...
Human-mediated selection can strongly influence the evolutionary response of natural organisms withi...
The evolution of plant defence in response to herbivory will depend on the fitness effects of damage...
Upon introduction to new continents, invading species encounter novel communities of consumers, path...
Both theoretical and empirical works have highlighted the difference in the evolutionary implication...
Strong human-mediated selection via herbicide application in agroecosystems has repeatedly led to th...
Although plants are generally attacked by a community of several species of herbivores, relatively l...
Trait differences among plants are expected to influence the outcome of competition; competition sho...