| Literature DB >> 32255508 |
Shinichi Asao1, Lucy Hayes1, Michael J Aspinwall2,3, Paul D Rymer2, Chris Blackman2, Callum J Bryant1, Darren Cullerne1, John J G Egerton1, Yuzhen Fan1, Peter Innes1, A Harvey Millar4, Josephine Tucker1, Shahen Shah1,5, Ian J Wright6, Gabriel Yvon-Durocher7, David Tissue2, Owen K Atkin1.
Abstract
We used a widely distributed tree Eucalyptus camaldulensis subsp. camaldulensis to partition intraspecific variation in leaf functional traits to genotypic variation and phenotypic plasticity. We examined if genotypic variation is related to the climate of genotype provenance and whether phenotypic plasticity maintains performance in a changing environment. Ten genotypes from different climates were grown in a common garden under watering treatments reproducing the wettest and driest edges of the subspecies' distribution. We measured functional traits reflecting leaf metabolism and associated with growth (respiration rate, nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations, and leaf mass per area) and performance proxies (aboveground biomass and growth rate) each season over a year. Genotypic variation contributed substantially to the variation in aboveground biomass but much less in growth rate and leaf traits. Phenotypic plasticity was a large source of the variation in leaf traits and performance proxies and was greater among sampling dates than between watering treatments. The variation in leaf traits was weakly correlated to performance proxies, and both were unrelated to the climate of genotype provenance. Intraspecific variation in leaf traits arises similarly among genotypes in response to seasonal environmental variation, instead of long-term water availability or climate of genotype provenance.Entities:
Keywords: climate; genotype; growth; intraspecific variation; leaf functional traits; phenotypic plasticity; season; water availability
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32255508 DOI: 10.1111/nph.16579
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151