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Life history variation in an invasive plant is associated with climate and recent colonization of a specialist herbivore
2020
American Journal of Botany
Spatial variation in selective pressures can lead to intraspecific variation in life history, favoring some life histories and constraining others depending on the vulnerability of life stages. We examined how spatial variation in herbivory and climate influences flowering size and the occurrence of semelparity (reproducing once) versus iteroparity (reproducing multiple times) in the introduced range of an invasive plant, houndstongue (Cynoglossum officinale). Houndstongue is a short-lived,
doi:10.1002/ajb2.1531
pmid:32914886
fatcat:tdwagpocvfhl5ly3ubzjwyipny