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      Ecophysiology of C4 Forage Grasses—Understanding Plant Growth for Optimising Their Use and Management

      , ,
      Agriculture
      MDPI AG

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          A modular concept of phenotypic plasticity in plants.

          Based on empirical evidence from the literature we propose that, in nature, phenotypic plasticity in plants is usually expressed at a subindividual level. While reaction norms (i.e. the type and the degree of plant responses to environmental variation) are a property of genotypes, they are expressed at the level of modular subunits in most plants. We thus contend that phenotypic plasticity is not a whole-plant response, but a property of individual meristems, leaves, branches and roots, triggered by local environmental conditions. Communication and behavioural integration of interconnected modules can change the local responses in different ways: it may enhance or diminish local plastic effects, thereby increasing or decreasing the differences between integrated modules exposed to different conditions. Modular integration can also induce qualitatively different responses, which are not expressed if all modules experience the same conditions. We propose that the response of a plant to its environment is the sum of all modular responses to their local conditions plus all interaction effects that are due to integration. The local response rules to environmental variation, and the modular interaction rules may be seen as evolving traits targeted by natural selection. Following this notion, whole-plant reaction norms are an integrative by-product of modular plasticity, which has far-reaching methodological, ecological and evolutionary implications. Copyright New Phytologist (2005).
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            The effect of plant structure on the intake of tropical pastures. I. Variation in the bite size of grazing cattle

            TH Stobbs (1973)
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              The effect of plant structure on the intake of tropical pastures. II. Differences in sward structure, nutritive value, and bite size of animals grazing Setaria anceps and Chloris gayana at various stages of growth

              TH Stobbs (1973)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ABSGFK
                Agriculture
                Agriculture
                MDPI AG
                2077-0472
                September 2015
                July 29 2015
                : 5
                : 3
                : 598-625
                Article
                10.3390/agriculture5030598
                b12bd4f1-c317-45ee-84cf-416bb5213df6
                © 2015

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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