Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA
Department of Geology and Planetary Science, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA.
AoB Plants. 2014 Jun 30;6:plu036. doi: 10.1093/aobpla/plu036.
Serpentine soils are edaphically stressful environments that host many endemic plant species. In particular, serpentine soils are high in several heavy metals (e.g. nickel, cobalt and chromium) and these high heavy metal concentrations are thought, in part, to lead to varying levels of plant adaptation and soil affinities (i.e. endemic vs. non-endemic plant species). It is unclear, however, whether serpentine endemics vs. non-endemics differ with respect to heavy metal uptake into either vegetative or reproductive organs. Here, we use nickel as a model to determine whether plant heavy metal uptake varies with the level of endemism in several non-hyperaccumulating species. Under controlled greenhouse conditions, we grew seven plant species from the Brassicaceae family that vary in their degrees of affinity to serpentine soil from low (indifferent) to medium (indicator) and high (endemic) in soil that was nickel supplemented or not. We quantified nickel concentrations in leaves, pistils, anthers, pollen and nectar. While nickel concentrations did not vary across organs or affinities when grown in control soils, under conditions of nickel supplementation endemic species had the lowest tissue concentrations of nickel, particularly when considering leaves and pistils, compared with indifferent/indicator species. Species indifferent to serpentines incorporated higher concentrations of nickel into reproductive organs relative to leaves, but this was not the case for indicator species and endemics where nickel concentration was similar in these organs. Our findings suggest that endemic species possess the ability to limit nickel uptake into above-ground tissues, particularly in reproductive organs where it may interfere with survival and reproduction. Indifferent species accumulated significantly more nickel into reproductive organs compared with leaves, which may limit their reproductive potential relative to endemic species when growing on serpentine soils. Additional work determining the fitness consequences of these differences will further our understanding of edaphic endemism.
蛇纹岩土是一种土壤压力大的环境,其中有许多特有植物物种。特别是,蛇纹岩土中的重金属含量很高(如镍、钴和铬),这些高浓度的重金属部分被认为导致了不同程度的植物适应和土壤亲和性(即特有植物与非特有植物)。然而,目前还不清楚蛇纹岩土特有植物与非特有植物在营养器官或繁殖器官对重金属的吸收方面是否存在差异。在这里,我们使用镍作为模型,以确定在几种非超积累物种中,植物对重金属的吸收是否因特有性水平而有所不同。在受控温室条件下,我们种植了来自十字花科的七种植物,这些植物对蛇纹岩土的亲和力从低(不感兴趣)到中(指示物)到高(特有)不等,土壤中添加或不添加镍。我们量化了叶片、雌蕊、雄蕊、花粉和花蜜中的镍浓度。虽然在对照土壤中,无论器官或亲和力如何,镍浓度都没有差异,但在镍补充条件下,特有物种的组织中镍浓度最低,特别是考虑到叶片和雌蕊,与不感兴趣/指示物物种相比。对蛇纹岩土不感兴趣的物种将更高浓度的镍纳入生殖器官,而不是叶片,但指示物种和特有物种则不然,它们在这些器官中的镍浓度相似。我们的研究结果表明,特有物种具有限制地上组织对镍吸收的能力,特别是在生殖器官中,因为镍可能会干扰生存和繁殖。不感兴趣的物种在生殖器官中积累的镍明显多于叶片,这可能会限制它们在蛇纹岩土上生长时相对于特有物种的繁殖潜力。进一步确定这些差异对适应性的影响将有助于我们更好地理解土壤特有现象。