Environmental and Biogeographic Drivers behind Alpine Plant Thermal Tolerance and Genetic Variation

Author:

Danzey Lisa M.1ORCID,Briceño Verónica F.2,Cook Alicia M.1ORCID,Nicotra Adrienne B.2,Peyre Gwendolyn3ORCID,Rossetto Maurizio45ORCID,Yap Jia-Yee S.45,Leigh Andrea2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Life Sciences, Faculty of Science, University of Technology Sydney, Broadway, NSW 2007, Australia

2. Research School of Biology, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia

3. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of the Andes, Bogota 111711, Colombia

4. Research Centre for Ecosystem Resilience, Australian Institute of Botanical Science, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia

5. Queensland Alliance of Agriculture and Food Innovation, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia

Abstract

In alpine ecosystems, elevation broadly functions as a steep thermal gradient, with plant communities exposed to regular fluctuations in hot and cold temperatures. These conditions lead to selective filtering, potentially contributing to species-level variation in thermal tolerance and population-level genetic divergence. Few studies have explored the breadth of alpine plant thermal tolerances across a thermal gradient or the underlying genetic variation thereof. We measured photosystem heat (Tcrit-hot) and cold (Tcrit-cold) thresholds of ten Australian alpine species across elevation gradients and characterised their neutral genetic variation. To reveal the biogeographical drivers of present-day genetic signatures, we also reconstructed temporal changes in habitat suitability across potential distributional ranges. We found intraspecific variation in thermal thresholds, but this was not associated with elevation, nor underpinned by genetic differentiation on a local scale. Instead, regional population differentiation and considerable homozygosity within populations may, in part, be driven by distributional contractions, long-term persistence, and migrations following habitat suitability. Our habitat suitability models suggest that cool-climate-distributed alpine plants may be threatened by a warming climate. Yet, the observed wide thermal tolerances did not reflect this vulnerability. Conservation efforts should seek to understand variations in species-level thermal tolerance across alpine microclimates.

Funder

Australian Research Council Linkage Project

Publisher

MDPI AG

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