Department of Biology, University of Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Am J Bot. 2019 Aug;106(8):1068-1080. doi: 10.1002/ajb2.1334. Epub 2019 Jul 31.
Determining how species perform in novel climatic environments is essential for understanding (1) responses to climate change and (2) evolutionary consequences of biological invasions. For the vast majority of species, the number of population characteristics that will predict performance and patterns of natural selection in novel locations in the wild remains limited.
We evaluated phenological, vegetative, architectural, and fitness-related traits in experimental gardens in contrasting climates (Ontario, Canada, and South Carolina, USA) in the North American non-native distribution of Arabidopsis thaliana. We assessed the effects of climatic distance, geographic distance, and genetic features of history on performance and patterns of natural selection in the novel garden settings.
We found that plants had greater survivorship, flowered earlier, were larger, and produced more fruit in the south, and that genotype-by-environment interactions were significant between gardens. However, our analyses revealed similar patterns of natural selection between gardens in distinct climate zones. After accounting for genetic ancestry, we also detected that population climatic distance best predicted performance within gardens.
These data suggest that colonization success in novel, non-native environments is determined by a combination of climate and genetic history. When performance at novel sites was assessed with seed sources from geographically and genetically disparate, established non-native populations, proximity to the garden alone was insufficient to predict performance. Our study highlights the need to evaluate seed sources from diverse origins to describe comprehensively phenotypic responses to novel environments, particularly for taxa in which many source populations may contribute to colonization.
确定物种在新的气候环境中的表现对于理解(1)对气候变化的响应和(2)生物入侵的进化后果至关重要。对于绝大多数物种而言,能够预测其在野外新地点的表现和自然选择模式的种群特征数量仍然有限。
我们在加拿大安大略省和美国南卡罗来纳州的对比气候实验花园中评估了拟南芥在北美非本地分布中的物候学、营养生长、结构和与适应度相关的特征。我们评估了气候距离、地理距离以及历史遗传特征对新花园环境中表现和自然选择模式的影响。
我们发现,植物在南部的存活率更高、开花更早、体型更大、果实更多,并且在花园之间存在显著的基因型-环境互作。然而,我们的分析表明,在不同气候带的花园中,自然选择的模式相似。在考虑遗传起源后,我们还发现,种群的气候距离最能预测花园内的表现。
这些数据表明,在新的非本地环境中的殖民成功是由气候和遗传历史共同决定的。当使用来自地理位置和遗传上差异较大的已建立的非本地种群的种子源在新地点评估表现时,仅靠近花园本身不足以预测表现。我们的研究强调了需要评估来自不同来源的种子源,以全面描述对新环境的表型响应,特别是对于那些许多来源种群可能有助于殖民化的分类群。