Literature DB >> 23944274

Plasticity in reproduction and growth among 52 range-wide populations of a Mediterranean conifer: adaptive responses to environmental stress.

L Santos-Del-Blanco1, S P Bonser, F Valladares, M R Chambel, J Climent.   

Abstract

A plastic response towards enhanced reproduction is expected in stressful environments, but it is assumed to trade off against vegetative growth and efficiency in the use of available resources deployed in reproduction [reproductive efficiency (RE)]. Evidence supporting this expectation is scarce for plants, particularly for long-lived species. Forest trees such as Mediterranean pines provide ideal models to study the adaptive value of allocation to reproduction vs. vegetative growth given their among-population differentiation for adaptive traits and their remarkable capacity to cope with dry and low-fertility environments. We studied 52 range-wide Pinus halepensis populations planted into two environmentally contrasting sites during their initial reproductive stage. We investigated the effect of site, population and their interaction on vegetative growth, threshold size for female reproduction, reproductive-vegetative size relationships and RE. We quantified correlations among traits and environmental variables to identify allocation trade-offs and ecotypic trends. Genetic variation for plasticity was high for vegetative growth, whereas it was nonsignificant for reproduction. Size-corrected reproduction was enhanced in the more stressful site supporting the expectation for adverse conditions to elicit plastic responses in reproductive allometry. However, RE was unrelated with early reproductive investment. Our results followed theoretical predictions and support that phenotypic plasticity for reproduction is adaptive under stressful environments. Considering expectations of increased drought in the Mediterranean, we hypothesize that phenotypic plasticity together with natural selection on reproductive traits will play a relevant role in the future adaptation of forest tree species.
© 2013 The Authors. Journal of Evolutionary Biology © 2013 European Society For Evolutionary Biology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  ecotypic trends; genotype-by-environment interaction; reproductive allometry; threshold size for reproduction; trade-offs

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23944274     DOI: 10.1111/jeb.12187

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Evol Biol        ISSN: 1010-061X            Impact factor:   2.411


  14 in total

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3.  Phenotypic integration and life history strategies among populations of Pinus halepensis: an insight through structural equation modelling.

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4.  Harnessing tree-ring phenotypes to disentangle gene by environment interactions and their climate dependencies in a circum-Mediterranean pine.

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7.  Water depth affects reproductive allocation and reproductive allometry in the submerged macrophyte Vallisneria natans.

Authors:  Lei Li; Stephen P Bonser; Zhichun Lan; Ligang Xu; Jiakuan Chen; Zhiping Song
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8.  Plasticity in Meristem Allocation as an Adaptive Strategy of a Desert Shrub under Contrasting Environments.

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9.  Phenotypic Plasticity in Reproductive Traits of the Perennial Shrub Ulex europaeus in Response to Shading: A Multi-Year Monitoring of Cultivated Clones.

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10.  Reproductive efficiency and shade avoidance plasticity under simulated competition.

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Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2016-06-21       Impact factor: 2.912

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