Shefferson, R.P. 2006. Survival costs of adult dormancy and the confounding
influence of size in lady's slipper orchids, genus Cypripedium. Oikos 115:253-
262


Abstract Adult whole-plant dormancy is a phenomenon in which a perennial,
herbaceous plant does not sprout for one or more years. Although previous studies
have noted a cost of dormancy to survival, none have accounted for the potentially
confounding influence of size variation on this relationship. I asked whether the
probabilities of dormancy and survival in dormancy-prone plants vary with size,
possibly creating the appearance of a life-history tradeoff between survival and
dormancy. I censused sympatric populations of three lady’s slipper orchid taxa,
Cypripedium parviflorum , C. candidum, and C. x andrewsii , in an 11-year study (1994
to 2004) at Gavin Prairie, Illinois, USA. Annual dormancy and survival trends were
modeled using Cormack-Jolly-Seber mark-recapture analysis, while stage-specific
survival and stratum-transitions (i.e. probability of transitioning among stages
conditional upon survival) were modeled with multi-strata mark-recapture analysis.
Annual dormancy probabilities and transition probabilities to and from dormancy
varied synchronously among taxa, while trends in survival did not. Both survival and
dormancy varied with number of sprouts in the previous year, positively in the case of
the former and negatively in the case of the latter. Accounting for plant size in this way
eliminated any variation in survival by life-history stage, with dormant plants surviving
at the same rate as nondormant plants of the same size. Transitions among stages
did not vary with plant size. My results suggest common climatic cues to dormancy,
and suggest caution in inferring costs of dormancy from studies in which plant size is
not controlled, as such costs may be artifacts of smaller plants being more dormant-
prone and less likely to survive.

Article copyright notice: © 2006 by OIKOS.

View PDF
Copyright 2009 Richard P. Shefferson.  All rights reserved.
Shefferson, Kull, and Tali 2006