Münzbergová Zuzana, Vandvik Vigdis, Hadincová Věroslava
Institute of Botany, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czechia.
Department of Botany, Faculty of Science, Charles University, Prague, Czechia.
Front Plant Sci. 2021 May 17;12:659479. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2021.659479. eCollection 2021.
Filing gaps in our understanding of species' abilities to adapt to novel climates is a key challenge for predicting future range shifts and biodiversity loss. Key knowledge gaps are related to the potential for evolutionary rescue in response to climate, especially in long-lived clonally reproducing species. We illustrate a novel approach to assess the potential for evolutionary rescue using a combination of reciprocal transplant experiment in the field to assess performance under a changing climate and independent growth chamber assays to assess growth- and physiology-related plant trait maxima and plasticities of the same clones. We use a clonal grass, , as a model species. We propagated individual clones and used them in a transplant experiment across broad-scale temperature and precipitation gradients, simulating the projected direction of climate change in the region. Independent information on trait maxima and plasticities of the same clones was obtained by cultivating them in four growth chambers representing climate extremes. Plant survival was affected by interaction between plant traits and climate change, with both trait plasticities and maxima being important for adaptation to novel climates. Key traits include plasticity in extravaginal ramets, aboveground biomass, and osmotic potential. The direction of selection in response to a given climatic change detected in this study mostly contradicted the natural trait clines indicating that short-term selection pressure as identified here does not match long-term selection outcomes. Long-lived clonal species exposed to different climatic changes are subjected to consistent selection pressures on key traits, a necessary condition for adaptation to novel conditions. This points to evolutionary rescue as an important mechanism for dealing with climate change in these species. Our experimental approach may be applied also in other model systems broadening our understanding of evolutionary rescue. Such knowledge cannot be easily deduced from observing the existing field clines.
填补我们对物种适应新气候能力理解上的空白,是预测未来范围变化和生物多样性丧失的一项关键挑战。关键的知识空白与应对气候变化时进化拯救的潜力有关,尤其是在长寿的克隆繁殖物种中。我们展示了一种新方法,通过结合田间互作移植实验来评估在气候变化下的表现,以及独立的生长室测定来评估同一克隆体与生长和生理相关的植物性状最大值及可塑性,从而评估进化拯救的潜力。我们使用一种克隆草本植物作为模式物种。我们繁殖了单个克隆体,并将它们用于跨越广泛温度和降水梯度的移植实验中,模拟该地区气候变化的预测方向。通过在代表气候极端情况的四个生长室中培养相同的克隆体,获得了关于性状最大值和可塑性的独立信息。植物存活受到植物性状与气候变化之间相互作用影响,性状可塑性和最大值对于适应新气候都很重要。关键性状包括地下分株的可塑性、地上生物量和渗透势。本研究中检测到的对给定气候变化的选择方向大多与自然性状渐变群相矛盾,这表明此处确定的短期选择压力与长期选择结果不匹配。暴露于不同气候变化下的长寿克隆物种在关键性状上受到一致的选择压力,这是适应新环境的必要条件。这表明进化拯救是这些物种应对气候变化的重要机制。我们的实验方法也可应用于其他模式系统,加深我们对进化拯救的理解。此类知识无法轻易从观察现有的野外渐变群中推断出来。