dc.description.abstract | Timing is everything for Arctic flowering plants. Early flowers might be destroyed by frost,
while late flowers have less time and resources to mature fruit. With climate change, Arctic
flowering phenology is shifting. Yet for many species, phenology studies only encompass the
onset of flowering and lack baseline data on within-plant flowering times. I used the
gynodioecious cushion plant Silene acaulis (L.) Jacq. to investigate how within-plant
flowering phenology impacts fruit production in one growing season. In 2019, time-lapse
cameras were used to daily observe flowers within two populations in the Low-Arctic
(Narsarsuaq, Greenland in the Low-Arctic/Sub-Arctic transition zone; 7851 flowers, 21
plants) and the High-Arctic (Bjørndalen, Svalbard; 1587 flowers, 11 plants). Plants flowered
for approximately three weeks, with a positively skewed peak floral display. In the LowArctic site, most investigated individuals were females dependent on pollinator visits for fruit
production. Within these Low-Arctic females, flowers blooming during peak floral display
had a higher probability of fruit set than flowers blooming outside peak floral display. In
addition, flowers blooming before peak flowering were more likely to produce fruit than
flowers blooming after peak flowering, both at the individual level and between individuals
within the whole population. Hermaphrodites, however, can self-pollinate, and preliminary
results indicate higher fruit set outside peak flowering within individuals and populations. In
contrast to the Low-Arctic site, all plants in the High-Arctic site were females and a frost
event occurred during flowering. Despite the frost event, females in the High-Arctic site had
twice as high fruits per flower proportions as females in the Low-Arctic site. For flowers not
exposed to frost, similarly to the Low-Arctic site, flowers blooming during peak floral display
were more likely to produce fruit than flowers blooming outside peak floral display. Also
similar to the Low-Arctic site, early flowers, both within individuals and the population, had a
higher probability of fruit set than late flowers. For frost exposed flowers, however, the
degree of frost damage was likely more important for fruit set than flower timing, indicating
that late flowers can be part of a bet-hedging strategy. Altogether, these results portray how a
long flowering period, combined with a peak floral display and early flowering, can be a
strategy to ensure fruit production in the unpredictable Arctic growing season. | en_US |