Gorton Amanda J, Tiffin Peter, Moeller David A
Graduate Program in Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, University of Minnesota, 1987 Upper Buford Circle, Saint Paul, MN, 55108, USA.
Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of Minnesota, 1479 Gortner Avenue, Saint Paul, MN, 55108, USA.
Oecologia. 2019 Aug;190(4):941-953. doi: 10.1007/s00442-019-04463-4. Epub 2019 Jul 9.
Climate change is affecting both the volume and distribution of precipitation, which in turn is expected to affect the growth and reproduction of plant populations. The near ubiquity of local adaptation suggests that adaptive differentiation may have important consequences for how populations are affected by and respond to changing precipitation. Here, we manipulated rainfall in a common garden to examine how differentiation among populations of common ragweed, Ambrosia artemisiifolia (Asteraceae) affects responses to water availability expected under climate change. We collected seeds from 26 populations along gradients of historical rainfall and used event-based rainout shelters and watering additions to simulate drier summer conditions and more extreme rainfall events, respectively. Ambrosia artemisiifolia had higher fitness on average under reduced rainfall, suggesting it may spread and become more abundant in areas projected to become hotter and drier during the summer months. We also found strong evidence for phenotypic and fitness clines across both latitude and longitude, and that phenological responses and fitness effects of altered rainfall depended on seed source or historical climate. The effect of rainfall treatment on female fitness was highest in western and mid longitudes, but there was little effect on eastern populations. Across latitude, the effect of rainfall treatment on male fitness was highest in southern populations. These phenology and fitness clines suggest that adaptive differentiation across the species' range has the potential to shape future responses of A. artemisiifolia populations to climate change, particularly altered patterns of rainfall.
气候变化正在影响降水量的总量和分布,进而预计会影响植物种群的生长和繁殖。局部适应性几乎无处不在,这表明适应性分化可能对种群如何受到降水变化的影响以及如何应对降水变化具有重要影响。在这里,我们在一个共同的园圃中对降雨进行了控制,以研究普通豚草(菊科豚草属)种群间的分化如何影响对气候变化下预期的水分可利用性的响应。我们沿着历史降雨梯度从26个种群收集种子,并分别使用基于事件的防雨棚和人工浇水来模拟更干燥的夏季条件和更极端的降雨事件。普通豚草在降雨减少的情况下平均具有更高的适合度,这表明它可能会在预计夏季变得更热更干燥的地区扩散并变得更加繁茂。我们还发现了在纬度和经度上存在表型和适合度渐变群的有力证据,并且降雨变化的物候响应和适合度效应取决于种子来源或历史气候。降雨处理对雌性适合度的影响在西经和中经度地区最高,但对东部种群几乎没有影响。在纬度上,降雨处理对雄性适合度的影响在南部种群中最高。这些物候和适合度渐变群表明,整个物种分布范围内的适应性分化有可能塑造普通豚草种群对气候变化的未来响应,特别是降雨模式的改变。