Novaes Letícia R, Cornelissen Tatiana, Arroyo Juan, Simón-Porcar Violeta
Department of Plant Biology and Ecology, University of Seville, Seville, Andalusia, Spain.
Department of Genetics, Ecology and Evolution, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil.
Ann Bot. 2025 Feb 8;135(1-2):105-112. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcae062.
Elevation is a major factor shaping plant populations on a global scale. At the same time, reproductive traits play a major role in plant fitness. With increasing elevation and increasingly harsh conditions, decreases in pollinator visitation rates, sexual investment, seed set and heterozygosity (owing to increased selfing) are expected. In response, selection and/or phenotypic plasticity could lead to an increase in floral displays by plants to increase their attractiveness to pollinators and compensate for the negative fitness impacts of reduced pollinator activity. A large body of literature tests these hypotheses at the among-species level, but empirical evidence at the population level (i.e. wihin species), where adaptive change might occur, is still limited to species-specific studies. Unravelling the global patterns of change in the reproductive traits, flower visitation rates and heterozygosity of plant populations across variable environmental conditions, especially climate, can help us to understand how species are able to cope with shifting conditions associated with global change, particularly in mountains. Here, we adopted meta-analytical approaches to assess the reproductive changes of plant populations in response to elevation on a global scale.
We used a data set with 243 paired populations of plants at 'lower' and 'higher' elevations, spanning an elevation range of 0-4380 m a.s.l. and taken from 121 angiosperm species and 115 published studies. We analysed changes in the number of flowers, their size and longevity, pollen production, flower visitation rate, seed set and expected heterozygosity. We then tested whether the observed patterns for each trait were dependent upon plant phylogeny and various ecogeographical factors and species traits.
We found no evidence of elevation having a global effect on the reproductive traits of angiosperm populations. This null global pattern was not affected by geography or phylogenetics.
Our results suggest that changes in reproductive traits, flower visitation rates and heterozygosity in plant populations across elevations are specific to each species and ecosystem. Hence, macroevolutionary (across species) and macroecological patterns of elevation of plant reproduction reported previously are apparently not simply the outcome of microevolutionary changes (within species). This apparent specificity of response across plant species poses difficulties in predicting the effects of global changes and, specifically, climatic changes, on the fate of plant species, populations and communities.
海拔是在全球范围内塑造植物种群的主要因素。与此同时,繁殖性状在植物适合度方面起着重要作用。随着海拔升高以及环境条件愈发恶劣,传粉者访花率、有性繁殖投入、结实率和杂合度(由于自交增加)预计会降低。作为响应,选择和/或表型可塑性可能会导致植物增加花展示,以提高对传粉者的吸引力,并补偿传粉者活动减少对适合度产生的负面影响。大量文献在物种间水平检验了这些假设,但在可能发生适应性变化的种群水平(即物种内)的实证证据仍局限于特定物种的研究。揭示植物种群在不同环境条件(尤其是气候)下繁殖性状、花访花率和杂合度的全球变化模式,有助于我们了解物种如何应对与全球变化相关的条件变化,特别是在山区。在此,我们采用荟萃分析方法来评估全球范围内植物种群繁殖对海拔升高的响应变化。
我们使用了一个数据集,其中包含243对处于“低”海拔和“高”海拔的植物种群,海拔范围为0至4380米(海拔),取自121种被子植物和115项已发表的研究。我们分析了花的数量、大小和寿命、花粉产量、花访花率、结实率和预期杂合度的变化。然后,我们检验了每个性状观察到的模式是否依赖于植物系统发育以及各种生态地理因素和物种性状。
我们没有发现海拔对被子植物种群繁殖性状有全球影响的证据。这种无影响的全球模式不受地理或系统发育的影响。
我们的结果表明,不同海拔植物种群的繁殖性状、花访花率和杂合度变化因物种和生态系统而异。因此,先前报道的植物繁殖海拔的宏观进化(跨物种)和宏观生态模式显然并非简单的微观进化变化(物种内)的结果。植物物种间这种明显的响应特异性给预测全球变化,特别是气候变化,对植物物种、种群和群落命运的影响带来了困难。