TL;DR: Echium vulgare appears to tolerate better the dry, infertile quarry habitat than Picris hieracioides, indicating that there is substantial between-species variability among facultative biennials in their ability to colonize unproductive sites.
Abstract: SUMMARY character: the 'sparse' and 'dense' sites. The number of seeds produced were also estimated on the two sites. (2) The demography of P. hieracioides differed greatly on the two sites. On the dense site, more seedlings emerged and a greater proportion established, probably due to the higher water retention than on the sparse site. Conversely, a lower proportion of plants at the dense site survived to maturity, reproduction was delayed, and there was reduced seed output by mature plants, possibly due to competition. Survival and reproduction was highest in 1976, the year with the most rainfall during the growing season. Populations of P. hieracioides declined during the study on both sites, apparently because of low survival and establishment of seedlings during 4 subsequent years of drought. Populations persisted through the dry years by reproductive delay coupled with comparatively high survival of established plants. (3) Most aspects of Echium vulgare demography appeared unaffected by site conditions; only reproduction was delayed longer on the dense site. Moreover, the rates of survival from seedling emergence to maturity were as l gh during years of drought as when rainfall was abundant. Echium vulgare plants survived better during drought than those of Picris hieracioides. Populations of Echium vulgare increased even during 4 years of drought, suggesting that the species may have only recently begun colonizing the quarry. Echium vulgare appears to tolerate better the dry, infertile quarry habitat than Picris hieracioides, indicating that there is substantial between-species variability among facultative biennials in their ability to colonize unproductive sites. (4) Unlike old-field populations of facultative biennials that typically become extinct after one or two generations due to successional changes, P. hieracioides and Echium vulgare showed no decline resulting from competitive displacement. The populations will probably continue to persist in the quarry for many years.
TL;DR: A field investigation and a pot experiment were conducted to study the Zn and Cd accumulation in Picris divaricata Vant. as discussed by the authors showed that P. divarica accumulated up to 15,183 µg g -1 Zn in shoot with translocation factors of Zn, Cd all larger than one.
Abstract: A field investigation and a pot experiment were conducted to study the Zn and Cd accumulation in Picris divaricata Vant. Under natural conditions, the average Zn and Cd concentrations in shoot of P. divaricata were 5911 and 246 µg g -1 (DW), with the maxima of 18,339 and 585 µg g -1 , respectively. Grown on a mixed soil for three months, P. divaricata accumulated up to 15,183 µg g -1 Zn and 364 µg g -1 Cd in shoot with translocation factors of Zn and Cd all larger than one. Thus, P. divaricata could be identified as a new Zn and Cd hyperaccumulator found in China.
TL;DR: Phylogenetic relationships inferred from the independent and combined data are largely congruent and reveal that Leontodon sensu lato (s.l.) as presently defined is diphyletic: L. leontodon forms a clade with Helminthotheca, Picris and Hypochaeris as sister genera, whereas L. subgenus Oporinia is better treated as a separate genus.
Abstract: The plastid matK gene, trnL/F spacer, and nuclear rDNA ITS were sequenced for 36 species of Leontodon and 29 taxa of related genera of tribe Lactuceae. Phylogenetic relationships inferred from the independent and combined data are largely congruent and reveal that Leontodon sensu lato (s.l.) as presently defined is diphyletic: L. subgenus Leontodon forms a clade with Helminthotheca, Picris and Hypochaeris as sister genera, whereas L. subgenus Oporinia appears as a separate clade with strong bootstrap support and is thus better treated as a separate genus. Previous sectional classifications of Leontodon s.l. are considered in the light of DNA and additional morphological and karyological data. Support is presented for a core group of Hypochaeridinae sensu stricto (s.s.) with the two clades of Leontodon s.l., Helminthotheca, Picris, and Hypochaeris, whereas Urospermum, Hyoseris, Aposeris, and Rhagadiolus appear to be positioned more distantly.
TL;DR: Inter- and intra-specific variations in seed dispersal in the genus Picris (Compositae) are reported and discussed in relation to mathematical theories of evolutionarily stable dispersal “strategies”.
Abstract: Inter- and intra-specific variations in seed dispersal in the genus Picris (Compositae) are reported and discussed in relation to mathematical theories of evolutionarily stable dispersal “strategies”. Two main trends are found: (1) seed dispersability is generally reduced in semi-arid and arid regions (compared with more mesic regions) by achene dimorphism in which marginal achenes are larger, lack a pappus, and are retained on the mother plant in unified involucral bracts; (2) dispersability is higher in arid than in semiarid regions, due to an increased frequency of wind-dispersal achenes in species restricted to desert washes. The latter trend is interpreted, on the basis of the mathematical theories, as an adaptation to the greater crowding and spatial variability of water availability in desert washes.