Affiliation:
1. School of Plant and Environmental Sciences Virginia Tech Blacksburg Virginia 24061 USA
Abstract
SUMMARYWeeds in agricultural settings continually adapt to stresses from ecological and anthropogenic sources, in some cases leading to resistant populations. However, consequences of repeated sub‐lethal exposure of these stressors on fitness and stress “memory” over generations remain poorly understood. We measured plant performance over a transgenerational experiment with Arabidopsis thaliana where plants were exposed to sub‐lethal stress induced by the herbicides glyphosate or trifloxysulfuron, stresses from clipping or shading in either one (G1) or four successive generations (G1–G4), and control plants that never received stress. We found that fourth‐generation (G4) plants that had been subjected to three generations of glyphosate or trifloxysulfuron stress produced higher post‐stress biomass, seed weight, and rosette area as compared to that produced by plants that experienced stress only in the first generation (G1). By the same measure, clipping and shade were more influential on floral development time (shade) and seed weight (clipping) but did not show responsive phenotypes for vegetative metrics after multiple generations. Overall, we found that plants exhibited more rapid transgenerational vegetative “stress memory” to herbicides while reproductive plasticity was stressor dependent and similar between clipping/shade and anthropogenic stressors. Our study suggests that maternal plant stress memory aids next‐generation plants to respond and survive better under the same stressors.
Funder
National Institute of Food and Agriculture