Evidence of differential phenotypic plasticity in a desert mustard

Author:

Alfaro Brian12ORCID,Marshall Diane L.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology Eastern University St. Davids Pennsylvania USA

2. Department of Biology University of New Mexico Albuquerque New Mexico USA

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding the effect of the environment on trait variation is critical for ecologically and economically important plants. Here, we asked whether differences in soil moisture are a source of variation in Sahara mustard (Brassica tournefortii). We subjected common garden populations of plants derived from native, invasive, and landrace sources (ranges) to varying water addition treatments. Using principal component analysis, we generated composite variables of life history traits for ANCOVA tests and plotted norms of reaction. Planting time was included as a covariate because we observed differences in seedling emergence despite efforts to standardize germination. We also examined the population coefficient of variation of individual traits (plasticity) and the association of trait CVs with fitness. The amount of plasticity varied but was inconsistent among range sources for all composite traits. Planting time did not affect treatments, but plants from different ranges responded differently to variable planting times. With a surplus of water, plants derived from native and invasive populations plateaued in vegetative trait values but showed a continuous linear increase in reproductive trait values. Possibly as a result of domestication, moderate and high water treatments in landrace plants caused plateaus in composite trait values for flowering phenology, seed count, plant size, and branching. The ecological breadth shown by our plants is likely due to drought tolerance that evolved in Brassica tournefortii source populations.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference47 articles.

1. Alfaro B.(2021).Global population divergence of a cosmopolitan desert plant. Dissertation. ProQuest in press.

2. Phenotypic variation of life‐history traits in native, invasive, and landrace populations ofBrassica tournefortii

3. Response of three Brassica species to high temperature stress during reproductive growth

4. High water use in desert plants exposed to extreme heat

5. Baker D. V.(2007).Dispersal of an invasive tumbleweed. Dissertation. ProQuest.

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