1. Genetic differentiation, phenotypic plasticity and adaptation in a hybridizing pair of a more common and a less common Carex species
- Author
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Markus Fischer, Tatjana Oja, Lisanna Schmidt, Bernhard Schmid, University of Zurich, and Schmidt, Lisanna
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Evolution ,Population ,Zoology ,Plant Science ,580 Plants (Botany) ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Common species ,Behavior and Systematics ,Genetic variation ,1110 Plant Science ,910 Geography & travel ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Hybrid ,Local adaptation ,Phenotypic plasticity ,education.field_of_study ,Carex ,biology ,Ecology ,food and beverages ,biology.organism_classification ,10122 Institute of Geography ,1105 Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Adaptation ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Phenotypic variation may be genetically determined or reflect phenotypic plasticity. More common plants are expected to be less differentiated between and within regions and more adapted than less common ones. However, such differences might not develop in hybridizing species which cannot evolve completely independently. We collected 311 genets of Carex flava, 215 of C. viridula and 46 of their hybrid C. × subviridula from 42 natural populations in cold temperate Estonia, mild temperate Lowland Switzerland and alpine Highland Switzerland. Three plantlets from each genet were planted to three experimental gardens, one in each region. We measured survival, growth, reproduction and morphological traits. The experimental transplants showed strong plasticity and grew smallest in the alpine garden. The less common C. viridula was slightly more differentiated between regions of origin than the more common C. flava and the hybrid. However, this depended on the experimental garden. Significant origin-by-garden-by-taxon and taxon-by-garden interactions suggest differential adaptation among populations and taxa. Regional differed from non-regional plants in several traits indicating both adaptations and, especially for C. viridula, maladaptations to the home regions. For C. flava, plant seed production was higher when mean annual temperature and precipitation were more similar between population of origin and garden, suggesting local adaptation to climate. Hybrids were intermediate between parental taxa or more similar to one of them, which was retained across gardens. We conclude that plasticity, genetic variation and genotype–environment interactions all contributed to regional differentiation of the closely related species. Hybridization did not completely align evolutionary patterns, and the less common species showed slightly more genetic differentiation between populations and more maladapted traits than the more common one.
- Published
- 2018