作 者:李鈞敏,等
影響因子:2.920
刊物名稱:Oecologia
出版年卷:2016, 182(3): 755-764
文章摘要:Phenotypic plasticity is thought to be important
for plants in variable environments. The climatic variability
hypothesis poses that populations at higher latitudes,
due to the stronger variation in temperature, there should
be more plastic in response to temperature than populations
at lower latitudes. Similarly, populations at locations with
stronger precipitation fluctuations should be more plastic in
response to water availability than populations at locations
with less variable precipitation. We sampled seven and nine
populations of Solidago canadensis, a North American
native that is invasive in China, along a latitudinal (temperature
variability) and a longitudinal (precipitation variability)
gradient, respectively, in China, and grew them under
two temperature treatments and two water-availability
treatments, respectively. Among the four traits with significant
variation in plasticity among populations in response
to temperature, plasticity of leaf length-to-width ratio was significantly positively correlated with latitude and temperature
seasonality of the populations. In addition, root/shoot
ratio and water-use efficiency showed significant variation
in plasticity among populations in response to water availability,
and plasticities of these two traits were significantly
negatively correlated with longitude and positively correlated
with precipitation seasonality. The observed geographic
clines in plasticity suggest that phenotypic plasticity
of S. canadensis may have evolved rapidly in regions
with different climatic conditions, and this may have contributed
to the spread of this invasive species.
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