Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Skip to main page content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

The .gov means it’s official.
Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal government site.

Https

The site is secure.
Thehttps:// ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.

NIH NLM Logo
Log inShow account info
Access keysNCBI HomepageMyNCBI HomepageMain ContentMain Navigation
pubmed logo
Advanced Clipboard
User Guide

Full text links

Wiley full text link Wiley
Full text links

Actions

.2020 Feb;107(2):308-318.
doi: 10.1002/ajb2.1417. Epub 2020 Jan 13.

Resource availability alters fitness trade-offs: implications for evolution in stressful environments

Affiliations
Free article

Resource availability alters fitness trade-offs: implications for evolution in stressful environments

Rachel MacTavish et al. Am J Bot.2020 Feb.
Free article

Abstract

Premise: Industrialization and human activities have elevated temperatures and caused novel precipitation patterns, altering soil moisture and nutrient availability. Predicting evolutionary responses to climate change requires information on the agents of selection that drive local adaptation and influence resource acquisition and allocation. Here, we examined the contribution of nutrient and drought stress to local adaptation, and we tested whether trade-offs across fitness components constrain or facilitate adaptation under resource stress.

Methods: We exposed 35 families of Boechera stricta (Brassicaceae) to three levels of water and two levels of nutrient supply in a factorial design in the greenhouse. We sourced maternal families from a broad elevational gradient (2499-3530 m a.s.l.), representing disparate soil moisture and nutrient availability.

Results: Concordant with local adaptation, maternal families from arid, low-elevation populations had enhanced fecundity under severe drought over those from more mesic, high-elevation sites. Furthermore, fitness trade-offs between growth and reproductive success depended on the environmental context. Under high, but not low, nutrient levels, we found a negative phenotypic relationship between the probability of reproduction and growth rate. Similarly, a negative phenotypic association only emerged between fecundity and growth under severe drought stress, not the benign water treatment levels, indicating that stressful resource environments alter the direction of trait correlations. Genetic covariances were broadly concordant with these phenotypic patterns.

Conclusions: Despite high heritabilities in all fitness components across treatments, trade-offs between growth and reproduction could constrain adaptation to increasing drought stress and novel nutrient levels.

Keywords: Brassicaceae; abiotic stress; drought; fitness; genetic covariance; life history trade-offs; local adaptation; soil resource availability.

© 2020 Botanical Society of America.

PubMed Disclaimer

References

LITERATURE CITED

    1. Ackermann, M., R. Bijlsma, A. C. James, L. Partridge, B. J. Zwaan, and S. C. Stearns. 2001. Effects of assay conditions in life history experiments with Drosophila melanogaster. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 14: 199-209.
    1. Agrawal, A. A., J. K. Conner, and S. Rasmann. 2010. Tradeoffs and adaptive negative correlations in evolutionary ecology. In M. Bell, W. Eanes, D. Futuyma, and J. Levinton [eds.], Evolution since Darwin: The first 150 years, 243-268. Sinauer, Sunderland, MA.
    1. Agren, G. I., J. A. Wetterstedt, and M. F. Billberger. 2012. Nutrient limitation on terrestrial plant growth-modeling the interaction between nitrogen and phosphorus. New Phytologist 194: 953-960.
    1. Anderson, J. 1992. Responses of soils to climate change. Advances in Ecological Research 22: 163-210.
    1. Anderson, J., and Z. Gezon. 2015. Plasticity in functional traits in the context of climate change: a case study of the subalpine forb Boechera stricta (Brassicaceae). Global Change Biology 21: 1689-1703.

Publication types

MeSH terms

Grants and funding

LinkOut - more resources

Full text links
Wiley full text link Wiley
Cite
Send To

NCBI Literature Resources

MeSHPMCBookshelfDisclaimer

The PubMed wordmark and PubMed logo are registered trademarks of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Unauthorized use of these marks is strictly prohibited.


[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp