| Literature DB >> 24674649 |
Judah D Grossman1, Kevin J Rice.
Abstract
Elevated atmospheric CO2 has been shown to rapidly alter plant physiology and ecosystem productivity, but contemporary evolutionary responses to increased CO2 have yet to be demonstrated in the field. At a Mojave Desert FACE (free-air CO2 enrichment) facility, we tested whether an annual grass weed (Bromus madritensis ssp. rubens) has evolved in response to elevated atmospheric CO2 . Within 7 years, field populations exposed to elevated CO2 evolved lower rates of leaf stomatal conductance; a physiological adaptation known to conserve water in other desert or water-limited ecosystems. Evolution of lower conductance was accompanied by reduced plasticity in upregulating conductance when CO2 was more limiting; this reduction in conductance plasticity suggests that genetic assimilation may be ongoing. Reproductive fitness costs associated with this reduction in phenotypic plasticity were demonstrated under ambient levels of CO2 . Our findings suggest that contemporary evolution may facilitate this invasive species' spread in this desert ecosystem.Entities:
Keywords: Bromus rubens; contemporary evolution; desert ecosystem; elevated atmospheric CO2; genetic assimilation; invasive species; norms of reaction; phenotypic plasticity; stomatal conductance
Mesh:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24674649 PMCID: PMC4345824 DOI: 10.1111/ele.12274
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecol Lett ISSN: 1461-023X Impact factor: 9.492
Figure 1Evolution of reduced plasticity in stomatal conductance. Genetic differences in plastic response are indicated by interactive effects of field population source and growth chamber CO2 level on stomatal conductance in Bromus (mean ± SE).
Analyses of variance for the two-way factorial design examining the main and interactive effects of FACE field population source and growth chamber CO2 levels on (A) stomatal conductance, (B) inflorescence weight, (C) concentration of leaf nitrogen (microgrammes of N per gramme of leaf) and (D) number of days from planting to first flower.
| Source | d.f. | Mean square | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A. Stomatal conductance | ||||
| FACE population source | 1 | 1766.12 | 7.53 | 0.0134 |
| Growth chamber CO2 level | 1 | 6396.19 | 27.26 | <0.0001 |
| Population × CO2 level | 1 | 1593.12 | 6.79 | 0.0179 |
| Average maternal seed weight | 1 | 87.67 | 0.37 | 0.5486 |
| Chamber identity (random factor) | 1 | 1507.44 | 0.3940 | |
| Error | 18 | 234.61 | ||
| B. Inflorescence weight | ||||
| FACE population source | 1 | 0.6274 | 10.40 | 0.0145 |
| Growth chamber CO2 level | 1 | 0.7349 | 12.19 | 0.0101 |
| Population × CO2 level | 1 | 0.2925 | 4.85 | 0.0635 |
| Average maternal seed weight | 1 | 0.2012 | 3.34 | 0.1105 |
| Error | 7 | 0.0603 | ||
| C. Leaf [N] | ||||
| FACE population source | 1 | 0.0352 | 0.5319 | 0.4866 |
| Growth chamber CO2 level | 1 | 4.0420 | 61.1618 | <0.0001 |
| Population × CO2 level | 1 | 0.0415 | 0.6276 | 0.4511 |
| Error | 8 | 0.0661 | ||
| D. Days to first flower | ||||
| FACE population source | 1 | 3.485 | 0.0272 | 0.8732 |
| Growth chamber CO2 level | 1 | 94.454 | 0.7360 | 0.4159 |
| Population × CO2 level | 1 | 28.779 | 0.2242 | 0.6485 |
| Error | 8 | 128.340 | ||
Figure 2Fitness consequences of CO2 level and population source. Interactive effects of genetic and growth chamber CO2 level on reproductive fitness in Bromus as measured by inflorescence weight (mean ± SE).