| Literature DB >> 28590553 |
Maartje P Groot1, Alexander Kubisch2,3, N Joop Ouborg1, Jörn Pagel2, Karl J Schmid4, Philippine Vergeer1,5, Christian Lampei4.
Abstract
Transgenerational environmental effects can trigger strong phenotypic variation. However, it is unclear how cues from different preceding generations interact. Also, little is known about the genetic variation for these life history traits. Here, we present the effects of grandparental and parental mild heat, and their combination, on four traits of the third-generation phenotype of 14 Arabidopsis thaliana genotypes. We tested for correlations of these effects with climate and constructed a conceptual model to identify the environmental conditions that favour the parental effect on flowering time. We observed strong evidence for genotype-specific transgenerational effects. On average, A. thaliana accustomed to mild heat produced more seeds after two generations. Parental effects overruled grandparental effects in all traits except reproductive biomass. Flowering was generally accelerated by all transgenerational effects. Notably, the parental effect triggered earliest flowering in genotypes adapted to dry summers. Accordingly, this parental effect was favoured in the model when early summer heat terminated the growing season and environments were correlated across generations. Our results suggest that A. thaliana can partly accustom to mild heat over two generations and genotype-specific parental effects show non-random evolutionary divergence across populations that may support climate change adaptation in the Mediterranean.Entities:
Keywords: grandparental effects; heat stress; maternal effects; parental effects; phenotypic plasticity; temporal autocorrelation; transgenerational plasticity
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28590553 DOI: 10.1111/nph.14642
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151