Oregon Climate Change Research Institute, Oregon State University Corvallis, OR, USA ; College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis OR, USA.
IIHR-Hydroscience and Engineering, College of Engineering, The University of Iowa Iowa City, IA, USA.
Front Plant Sci. 2015 Mar 10;6:123. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2015.00123. eCollection 2015.
Budburst is a key adaptive trait that can help us understand how plants respond to a changing climate from the molecular to landscape scale. Despite this, acquisition of budburst data is constrained by a lack of information at the plant scale on the environmental stimuli associated with the release of bud dormancy. Additionally, to date, little effort has been devoted to phenotyping plants in natural populations due to the challenge of accounting for the effect of environmental variation. Nonetheless, natural selection operates on natural populations, and investigation of adaptive phenotypes in situ is warranted and can validate results from controlled laboratory experiments. To identify genomic effects on individual plant phenotypes in nature, environmental drivers must be concurrently measured, and characterized. Here, we designed and evaluated a sensor to meet these requirements for temperate woody plants. It was designed for use on a tree branch to measure the timing of budburst together with its key environmental drivers; temperature, and photoperiod. Specifically, we evaluated the sensor through independent corroboration with time-lapse photography and a suite of environmental sampling instruments. We also tested whether the presence of the device on a branch influenced the timing of budburst. Our results indicated the following: the temperatures measured by the budburst sensor's digital thermometer closely approximated the temperatures measured using a thermocouple touching plant tissue; the photoperiod detector measured ambient light with the same accuracy as did time lapse photography; the budburst sensor accurately detected the timing of budburst; and the sensor itself did not influence the budburst timing of Populus clones. Among other potential applications, future use of the sensor may provide plant phenotyping at the landscape level for integration with landscape genomics.
萌芽是一种关键的适应性特征,可以帮助我们了解植物如何从分子到景观尺度上对气候变化做出响应。尽管如此,由于缺乏与休眠芽释放相关的环境刺激的植物尺度信息,萌芽数据的获取受到限制。此外,由于难以解释环境变化的影响,迄今为止,由于难以解释环境变化的影响,很少有人致力于对自然种群中的植物进行表型分析。尽管如此,自然选择在自然种群中起作用,对自然种群中适应性表型的研究是合理的,并且可以验证受控实验室实验的结果。为了在自然界中确定个体植物表型的基因组效应,必须同时测量和描述环境驱动因素。在这里,我们设计并评估了一种传感器,以满足温带木本植物的这些要求。它旨在用于树枝上,以测量萌芽的时间及其关键环境驱动因素;温度和光照周期。具体来说,我们通过与延时摄影和一系列环境采样仪器的独立证实来评估传感器。我们还测试了树枝上设备的存在是否会影响萌芽的时间。我们的研究结果表明:萌芽传感器的数字温度计测量的温度与接触植物组织的热电偶测量的温度非常接近;光周期探测器以与延时摄影相同的精度测量环境光;萌芽传感器准确检测到萌芽的时间;传感器本身不会影响杨树无性系的萌芽时间。除了其他潜在的应用,未来对传感器的使用可能会在景观水平上为景观基因组学提供植物表型分析。