Population genetic differentiation and phenotypic plasticity of Ambrosia artemisiifolia under different nitrogen levels

被引:3
|
作者
Xiong, Yunqi [1 ,2 ]
Oduor, Ayub M. O. [3 ,4 ]
Zhao, Caiyun [1 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Res Inst Environm Sci, State Key Lab Environm Criteria & Risk Assessment, Beijing, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Coll Life Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China
[3] Taizhou Univ, Zhejiang Prov Key Lab Plant Evolutionary Ecol & Co, Taizhou, Peoples R China
[4] Tech Univ Kenya, Dept Appl Biol, Nairobi, Kenya
基金
国家重点研发计划;
关键词
common garden; common ragweed; N addition; plant invasion; plasticity; population differentiation; COMMON RAGWEED; LOCAL ADAPTATION; ARABIDOPSIS-THALIANA; INVASIVE PLANTS; FLOWERING TIME; INVADED-RANGE; ALIEN PLANTS; CLIMATE; SPREAD; DEPOSITION;
D O I
10.1002/eap.2903
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Rapid adaptive evolution and phenotypic plasticity are two mechanisms that often underlie invasiveness of alien plant species, but whether they can co-occur within invasive plant populations under altered environmental conditions such as nitrogen (N) enrichment has seldom been explored. Latitudinal clines in plant trait responses to variation in environmental factors may provide evidence of local adaptation. Here, we inferred the relative contributions of phenotypic plasticity and local adaptation to the performance of the invasive plant Ambrosia artemisiifolia under different soil N levels, using a common garden approach. We grew A. artemisiifolia individuals raised from seeds that were sampled from six invasive populations along a wide latitudinal cline in China (23 degrees 42 ' N to 45 degrees 43 ' N) under three N (0, 5, and 10 g N m(-2)) levels in a common garden. Results show significant interpopulation genetic differentiation in plant height, number of branches, total biomass, and transpiration rate of the invader A. artemisiifolia across the N treatments. The populations also expressed genetic differentiation in basal diameter, growth rate, leaf area, seed width, root biomass, aboveground biomass, stomatal conductance, and intercellular CO2 concentration regardless of N treatments. Moreover, plants from different populations of the invader displayed plastic responses in time to first flower, hundred-grain weight, net photosynthetic rate, and relative biomass allocation to roots and shoots and seed length under different N treatments. Additionally, individuals of A. artemisiifolia from higher latitudes grew shorter and allocated less biomass to the roots regardless of N treatment, while latitudinal cline (or lack thereof) in other traits depended on the level of N in which the plants were grown. Overall, these results suggest that rapid adaptive evolution and phenotypic plasticity in the various traits that we quantified may jointly contribute to invasiveness of A. artemisiifolia under different levels of N availability. More broadly, the results support the idea that phenotypic plasticity and rapid adaptive evolution can jointly enable invasive plants to colonize a wide range of environmental conditions.
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页数:16
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