Autochory
Autochory (from the Greek αὐτός autós , German 'self' and χωρεῖν chōreín , German 'move forward, wander' ) or self- propagation describes the independent spread of seeds or fruits without the help or cooperation of external forces (wind, water, animals). In contrast to this are plants, the fruit of which is dependent on external forces for the seed to spread and germinate; Allochorie (external spread).
The autochory as the propagation mechanism of plants is even more finely divided into:
- Ball autochory , self- scattering , also ballochorie , the spread through centrifugal mechanisms
- Herpautochory, herpochory , trypanochory , the spread through soil crawlers and drills
- Blastautochory, blastochory , the spread by self- offshoots .
- Barautochory , self-sowing, here the fruit stalks incline to the ground to spread the seeds, like with the two-leaved squill .
- Barochory , the spread through gravity, falling fruits, can also be understood as foreign spread through gravity or as achory (non-spread).
See also
literature
- Angelika Lüttig & Juliane Kasten: Rose hip & Co - flowers, fruits and spread of European plants. Fauna Verlag, Nottuln 2003, ISBN 3-935980-90-6 .
- Distribution type according to Düll and Kutzelnigg, 1986, and Müller-Schneider 1983, In: Publications of the Geobotanical Institute of the Eidg. Tech. Hochschule, Stiftung Rübel, in Zurich, volume (year): 125 (1995), online (PDF; 13.2 MB).
Individual evidence
- ↑ Wolfgang Frey, Rainer Lösch: Geobotany. 3rd edition, Springer, 2010, 2014, ISBN 978-3-662-45280-6 , p. 336.