摘要

Reproductive allocation (the proportion of biomass allocated to reproductive tissue, RA) in Sargassum thunbergii was studied in Yantai, Shandong Peninsula, southern coast of Bohai Bay, China. Annual reproduction initiated in mid-June and peaked in mid-July (90 +/- 8% fertile thalli and 75 +/- 6% RA mean). Both RA and percentage of fertile thalli exhibited significant temporal variations during reproduction. Sterile thalli were only observed in small length hierarchies at peak reproduction and mean values of RA showed a significantly hierarchical variation, suggesting that the size of thalli played an important role in reproduction and RA were size-dependent. Numerous receptacles were produced along the lateral branches during the reproductive period. A distinct seasonal pattern was observed wherein the presence of lateral branches was followed by the onset of reproduction. RA was positively correlated with the number of lateral branches. as well as the total length of lateral branches. In addition, fertile thalli decayed quickly after peak reproduction. The probability of decay was evidently higher for fertile than for sterile thalli, because all surviving thalli were sterile and short during July-August. So, a trade-off between reproduction and survival may exist at individual levels in S. thunbergii.