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A natural heating experiment : Phenotypic and genotypic responses of plant phenology to geothermal soil warming
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- Stockholms universitet, Institutionen för ekologi, miljö och botanik, 2019.
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Abstract
- Under global warming, the survival of many populations of sedentary organisms in seasonal environments will largely depend on their ability to cope with warming in situ by means of phenotypic plasticity or adaptive evolution. This is particularly true in high-latitude environments, where current growing seasons are short, and expected temperature increases large. In such short-growing season environments, the timing of growth and reproduction is critical to survival. Here, we use the unique setting provided by a natural geothermal soil warming gradient (Hengill geothermal area, Iceland) to study the response of Cerastium fontanum flowering phenology to temperature. We hypothesized that trait expression and phenotypic selection on flowering phenology are related to soil temperature, and tested the hypothesis that temperature-driven differences in selection on phenology have resulted in genetic differentiation using a common garden experiment. In the field, phenology was related to soil temperature, with plants in warmer microsites flowering earlier than plants at colder microsites. In the common garden, plants responded to spring warming in a counter-gradient fashion; plants originating from warmer microsites flowered relatively later than those originating from colder microsites. A likely explanation for this pattern is that plants from colder microsites have been selected to compensate for the shorter growing season by starting development at lower temperatures. However, in our study we did not find evidence of variation in phenotypic selection on phenology in relation to temperature, but selection consistently favoured early flowering. Our results show that soil temperature influences trait expression and suggest the existence of genetically based variation in flowering phenology leading to counter-gradient local adaptation along a gradient of soil temperatures. An important implication of our results is that observed phenotypic responses of phenology to global warming might often be a combination of short-term plastic responses and long-term evolutionary responses, acting in different directions.
- Subjects :
- 0106 biological sciences
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
media_common.quotation_subject
Climate Change
climatic variation
Iceland
Growing season
plant phenology
Caryophyllaceae
Flowers
Biology
010603 evolutionary biology
01 natural sciences
phenotypic plasticity
Soil
Environmental Chemistry
phenotypic selection
Geothermal gradient
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
General Environmental Science
Local adaptation
media_common
Ekologi
Global and Planetary Change
Phenotypic plasticity
Ecology
Phenology
Reproduction
Global warming
fungi
Temperature
food and beverages
biology.organism_classification
Adaptation, Physiological
geothermal ecosystems
Cerastium fontanum
Gene-Environment Interaction
local adaptation
microclimate
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....eefbb7a6ec7c6996744b781016cb6518