Testing the large genome constraint hypothesis in tropical rhizomatous herbs: life strategies, plant traits and habitat preferences in gingers

Author:

Záveská E.1ORCID,Šída O.2,Leong‐Škorničková J.34,Chumová Z.1ORCID,Trávníček P.1ORCID,Newman M. F.5,Poulsen A. D.5,Böhmová A.26,Chudáčková H.6,Fér T.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Czech Academy of Sciences Institute of Botany Průhonice Czech Republic

2. Department of Botany National Museum in Prague Prague Czech Republic

3. The Herbarium Singapore Botanic Gardens Singapore

4. Department of Biological Sciences National University of Singapore Singapore

5. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

6. Department of Botany Charles University Prague Czech Republic

Abstract

SUMMARYPlant species with large genomes tend to be excluded from climatically more extreme environments with a shorter growing season. Species that occupy such environments are assumed to be under natural selection for more rapid growth and smaller genome size (GS). However, evidence for this is available only for temperate organisms. Here, we study the evolution of GS in two subfamilies of the tropical family Zingiberaceae to find out whether species with larger genomes are confined to environments where the vegetative season is longer. We tested our hypothesis on 337 ginger species from regions with contrasting climates by correlating their GS with an array of plant traits and environmental variables. We revealed 16‐fold variation in GS which was tightly related to shoot seasonality. Negative correlations of GS with latitude, temperature and precipitation emerged in the subfamily Zingiberoidae, demonstrating that species with larger GS are excluded from areas with a shorter growing season. In the subfamily Alpinioideae, GS turned out to be correlated with the type of stem and light requirements and its members cope with seasonality mainly by adaptation to shady and moist habitats. The Ornstein–Uhlenbeck models suggested that evolution in regions with humid climates favoured larger GS than in drier regions. Our results indicate that climate seasonality exerts an upper constraint on GS not only in temperate regions but also in the tropics, unless species with large genomes find alternative ways to escape from that constraint.

Funder

Akademie Věd České Republiky

Grantová Agentura České Republiky

Ministerstvo Školství, Mládeže a Tělovýchovy

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science,Genetics

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