Phenotypic plasticity and specialization along an altitudinal gradient in Trifolium repens
Phenotypic plasticity and specialization represent seemingly contrasting
strategies to heterogeneous environments. Specialization is associated
with the loss of phenotypic plasticity, particularly in functional
traits. However, it is equivocal if this loss of plasticity is observed
only in the specific habitat and stress type where the specialization
occurs or a general loss of plasticity is seen across habitats. We
examined populations of Trifolium repens L. following an
expansion during the colonization of Australia from relatively good low
altitude habitats to more stressful high altitude habitats in the Blue
Mountains region, New South Wales, Australia. We examined if
specialization to abiotic stress causes a loss of adaptive plasticity in
functional traits under competition treatments (a different type of
stress rather than abiotic stress). We found that both low and high
altitude populations experienced a loss in performance in competition
treatments and did not express a shade avoidance response under
competition. Specialization to higher abiotic stress was associated with
the loss of adaptive plasticity in functional traits. Our results
suggest that specialization may limit the responses of plants to future
environmental changes.
___
- Balaguer L, Martinez-Ferri E, Valladares F, Pérez-Corona ME,
Baquedano FJ, Castillo FJ, Manrique E (2001). Population
divergence in the plasticity of the response of to the light
environment
Quercus coccifera
. Funct Ecol 15: 124-135.
- Barros FDV, Goulart MF, Telles SBS, Lovato MB, Valladares F, de
Lemos-Filho JP (2011). Phenotypic plasticity to light of two
congeneric trees from contrasting habitats: Brazilian Atlantic
forest versus cerrado (savanna). Plant Biol 14: 208-215.
- Bonser SP (2013). High reproductive efficiency as an adaptive
strategy in competitive environments. Funct Ecol 27: 876-885.
- Botto JF (2015). Plasticity to simulated shade is associated with
altitude in structured populations of
Arabidopsis thaliana
.
Plant Cell Environ 38:1321-1332.
- Clavel J, Julliard R, Devictor V (2011). Worldwide decline of
specialist species: toward a global functional homogenization?
Front Ecol Environ 9: 222-228.
- Elzinga JA, Atlan A, Biere A, Gigord L, Weis AE, Bernasconi G
(2007). Time after time: flowering phenology and biotic
interactions. Trends Ecol Evol 22: 432-439.
- Fazlioglu F, Al-Namazi A, Bonser SP (2016). Reproductive efficiency
and plasticity of different plant forms under simulated
competition. Ecol Evol 6: 4947-4957.
- Fazlioglu F, Bonser SP (2016). Phenotypic plasticity and specialization
in clonal versus non-clonal plants: a data synthesis. Acta Oecol
77: 193-200.
- Fazlioglu F, Wan JSH, Bonser SP (2017). Testing specialization
hypothesis among a stress gradient. Austral Ecol 42: 40-47.
- Frankow-Lindberg BE (2001). Adaptation to winter stress in
nine white clover populations: changes in non-structural
carbohydrates during exposure to simulated winter conditions
and ‘spring’ regrowth potential. Ann Bot-London 88: 745-751.
- Gibbin EM, Massamba N’Siala G, Chakravarti LJ, Jarrold MD, Calosi
P (2017). The evolution of phenotypic plasticity under global
change. Sci Rep-UK 7: 17253.
- Gratani L (2014). Plant phenotypic plasticity in response to
environmental factors. Advances in Botany 2014: 1-17.
- Griffith T, Sultan SE (2012). Field-based insights to the evolution
of specialization: plasticity and fitness across habitats in a
specialist/generalist species pair. Ecol Evol 2: 778-791.
- Grime JP (1979). Plant Strategies and Vegetative Processes. 2nd
ed.
Chichester, UK: Wiley.
- Huber H, Chen X, Hendriks M, Keijsers D, Voesenek LA, Pierik R,
Poorter H, de Kroon H, Visser EJ (2012). Plasticity as a plastic
response: How submergence-induced leaf elongation in
Rumex
palustris
depends on light and nutrient availability in its early
life stage. New Phytol 194: 572-582.
- Huber H, De Brouwer J, de Caluwe H (2008). Shade induced changes
in biomechanical petiole properties in the stoloniferous herb
Trifolium repens
. Evol Ecol 22: 399-416.
- Huber H, Wiggerman L (1997). Shade avoidance in the clonal
herb
Trifolium fragiferum
: a field study with experimentally
manipulated vegetation height. Plant Ecol 130: 53-62.
- Junttila O, Svenning MM, Solheim B (1990). Effects of temperature
and photoperiod on frost resistance of white clover (
Trifolium
repens
) ecotypes. Physiol Plantarum 79: 435-438.
- Li G, Yang D, Sun S (2008). Allometric relationships between lamina
area, lamina mass and petiole mass of 93 temperate woody
species vary with leaf habit, leaf form and altitude. Funct Ecol
22: 557-564.
- Lortie C, Aarssen LW (1996). The specialization hypothesis for
phenotypic plasticity in plants. Int J Plant Sci 157: 484-487.
- Matesanz S, Gianoli E, Valladares F (2010). Global change and the
evolution of phenotypic plasticity in plants. Ann NY Acad Sci
1206: 35-55.
- Murren CJ, Auld JR, Callahan H, Ghalambor CK, Handelsman CA,
Heskel MA, Kingsolver JG, Maclean HJ, Masel J, Maughan H et
al. (2015). Constraints on the evolution of phenotypic plasticity:
limits and costs of phenotype and plasticity. Heredity: 293-301.
- Ozbucak TB, Polat G, Akcin OE, Kutbay HG (2017). The effects of
elevation on the morpho-anatomical and ecological traits in
Cyclamen coum
subsp.
coum
Mill. populations in the central
black sea region of Turkey in contrasting habitats. Pol J Ecol
65: 211-226.
- Pfennig DW, Wund MA, Snell-Rood EC, Cruickshank T, Schlichting
CD, Moczek AP (2010). Phenotypic plasticity’s impacts on
diversification and speciation. Trends Ecol Evol 25: 459-467.
- Pigliucci M, Murren CJ, Schlichting CD (2006). Phenotypic plasticity
and evolution by genetic assimilation. J Exp Biol 209: 2362-
2367.
- Richards CL, Bossdorf O, Muth NZ, Gurevitch J, Pigliucci M (2006).
Jack of all trades, master of some? On the role of phenotypic
plasticity in plant invasions. Ecol Lett 9: 981-993.
- Schmitt J (1997). Is photomorphogenic shade avoidance adaptive?
Plant Cell Environ 20: 826-830.
- Sultan SE (2001). Phenotypic plasticity for fitness components in
Polygonum
species of contrasting ecological breadth. Ecology
82: 328-343.
- Taylor DR, Aarssen LW (1988). An interpretation of phenotypic
plasticity in
Agropyron repens
(Graminae). Am J Bot 75: 401-
413.
- Taylor DR, Aarssen LW, Loehle C (1990). On the relationship
between r/K selection and environmental carrying capacity: a
new habitat templet for plant life history strategies. Oikos 58:
239-250.
- Turcotte MM, Levine JM (2016). Phenotypic plasticity and species
coexistence. Trends Ecol Evol 31: 803-813.
- Valladares F, Wright S, Lasso E, Kitajima K (2000). Plastic phenotypic
response to light of 16 congeneric shrubs from a Panamanian
rainforest. Ecology 81: 1925-1936.
- Vermeulen PJ, Anten NPR, Schieving F, Werger MJ, During HJ
(2008). Height convergence in response to neighbour growth:
genotypic differences in the stoloniferous plant
Potentilla
reptans
. New Phytol 177: 688-697.
- Vermeulen PJ, Stuefer JF, Anten NPR, During HJ (2009). Carbon
gain in the competition for light between genotypes of the
clonal herb
Potentilla reptans
. J Ecol 97: 508-517.
- Weijschedé J, Berentsen R, De Kroon H, Huber H (2008). Variation
in petiole and internode length affects plant performance in
Trifolium repens
under opposing selection regimes. Evol Ecol
22: 383-397.
- Weijschedé J, Martínková J, De Kroon H, Huber H (2006). Shade
avoidance in
Trifolium repens
: costs and benefits of plasticity in
petiole length and leaf size. New Phytol 172: 655-666.
- Weinig C, Johnston J, German ZM, Demink LM (2006). Local and
global costs of adaptive plasticity to density in
Arabidopsis
thaliana
. Am Nat 167: 826-836.
- Woodfield DR, Clifford PTP, Baird IJ, Cousins GR (1995). Gene
flow and estimated isolation requirements for transgenic
white clover. In: Jones DD, editor. Proceedings of the 3rd
International Symposium on the Biosafety Results of Field
Tests of Genetically Modified Plants and Microorganisms.
Oakland, CA, USA: University of California Press, pp. 509-514.