Chambers Sally M, Emery Nancy C
Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO, USA.
AoB Plants. 2018 Sep 12;10(5):ply050. doi: 10.1093/aobpla/ply050. eCollection 2018 Oct.
Species-level responses to environmental change depend on the collective responses of their constituent populations and the degree to which populations are specialized to local conditions. Manipulative experiments in common-garden settings make it possible to test for population variation in species' responses to specific climate variables, including those projected to shift as the climate changes in the future. While this approach is being applied to a variety of plant taxa to evaluate their responses to climate change, these studies are heavily biased towards seed-bearing plant species. Given several unique morphological and physiological traits, fern species may exhibit very different responses from angiosperms and gymnosperms. Here, we tested the hypothesis that previously detected population differentiation in a fern species is due to differentiation in thermal performance curves among populations. We collected explants from six populations spanning the species' geographic range and exposed them to 10 temperature treatments. Explant survival, lifespan and the change in photosynthetic area were analysed as a function of temperature, source population and their interaction. Overall results indicated that explants performed better at the lowest temperature examined, and the threshold for explant performance reflects maximum temperatures likely to be experienced in the field. Surprisingly, explant fitness did not differ among source populations, suggesting that temperature is not the driver behind previously detected patterns of population differentiation. These results highlight the importance of other environmental axes in driving population differentiation across a species range, and suggest that the perennial life history strategy, asexual mating system and limited dispersal potential of may restrict the rise and differentiation of adaptive genetic variation in thermal performance traits among populations.
物种对环境变化的响应取决于其组成种群的集体响应以及种群对当地条件的适应程度。在共同花园环境中进行的操纵性实验,使得测试物种对特定气候变量(包括那些预计随着未来气候变化而发生变化的变量)的响应中的种群变异成为可能。虽然这种方法正在应用于各种植物类群以评估它们对气候变化的响应,但这些研究严重偏向于种子植物物种。鉴于蕨类物种具有一些独特的形态和生理特征,它们可能表现出与被子植物和裸子植物非常不同的响应。在这里,我们检验了一个假设,即先前在一种蕨类物种中检测到的种群分化是由于种群间热性能曲线的差异所致。我们从该物种地理分布范围内的六个种群收集外植体,并将它们置于10种温度处理下。分析外植体的存活率、寿命和光合面积变化与温度、源种群及其相互作用的函数关系。总体结果表明,外植体在检测到的最低温度下表现更好,外植体性能的阈值反映了野外可能经历的最高温度。令人惊讶的是,外植体的适合度在源种群之间没有差异,这表明温度不是先前检测到的种群分化模式背后的驱动因素。这些结果突出了其他环境轴在驱动物种范围内种群分化中的重要性,并表明多年生生活史策略、无性交配系统和有限的扩散潜力可能会限制种群间热性能性状中适应性遗传变异的产生和分化。