Abstract Phragmites australis is a dominant species in estuaries. It can reproduce sexually and clonally. Understanding the latitudinal patterns of the traits can help in predicting adaptive strategies across environmental gradients. However, changes in growth and reproductive traits of P. australis, as well as growth–reproduction relationships along latitudinal gradients remain unclear. We sampled P. australis from five estuaries along latitudinal gradients in China and analyzed changes in growth, reproductive, and biomass allocation. The results revealed that with increasing latitude, the ramet height, flowering frequency, inflorescence biomass per flowering ramet, and weight of 100 seeds increased, whereas the ramet density generally decreased. The latitudinal growth and reproduction patterns were primarily influenced by variations in the temperature, precipitation, and light intensity. With climate warming, high-latitude P. australis populations may reduce their flowering and seed production.
Fang et al. (Tue,) studied this question.