Simulating the effects of local adaptation and life history on the ability of plants to track climate shifts

被引:14
|
作者
Moran, Emily, V [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Merced, Dept Life & Environm Sci, 5200 N Lake Rd, Merced, CA 95343 USA
来源
AOB PLANTS | 2020年 / 12卷 / 01期
关键词
Climate change; dispersal; life history; local adaptation; range shift; simulation; GENE-FLOW; GEOGRAPHIC RANGE; FOREST TREES; EVOLUTION; DISPERSAL; LIMITS; SPREAD; FUTURE; SCALE; ENVIRONMENT;
D O I
10.1093/aobpla/plaa008
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Many studies have examined the impact of dispersal on local adaptation, but much less attention has been paid to how local adaptation influences range shifts. The aim of this study was to test how local adaptation might affect climate-driven range shifts in plants, and if this might differ between plants with different life histories. Simulated range shift dynamics were compared for hypothetical annual, perennial and tree species, each comprised of either one plastic genotype or six locally adapted genotypes. The landscape consists of shifting climate bands made up of 20 x 20 m patches containing multiple individuals. Effects of seed dispersal, breadth of the plastic species' tolerance, steepness of the climate gradient and rate of the climate shift are also examined. Local adaptation increased the equilibrium range size and aided range shifts by boosting fitness near range edges. However, when the rate of climate change was doubled on a steep gradient, locally adapted trees exhibited a higher percent loss of range during the climate shift. The plastic annual species with short dispersal was unable to recover its range size even after the climate stabilized, while the locally adapted annuals tracked climate change well. The results suggest that in most situations local adaptation and longer dispersal distances will be advantageous, though not necessarily sufficient, for tracking suitable climates. However, local adaptation might put species with long generation times at greater risk when climate shifts are very rapid. If confirmed by empirical tests, these results suggest that identifying variation between species in how fitness varies along climate gradients and in these key demographic rates might aid in prioritizing management actions.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The effects of phenotypic plasticity and local adaptation on forecasts of species range shifts under climate change
    Valladares, Fernando
    Matesanz, Silvia
    Guilhaumon, Francois
    Araujo, Miguel B.
    Balaguer, Luis
    Benito-Garzon, Marta
    Cornwell, Will
    Gianoli, Ernesto
    van Kleunen, Mark
    Naya, Daniel E.
    Nicotra, Adrienne B.
    Poorter, Hendrik
    Zavala, Miguel A.
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2014, 17 (11) : 1351 - 1364
  • [2] The effects of defaunation on plants' capacity to track climate change
    Fricke, Evan C.
    Ordonez, Alejandro
    Rogers, Haldre S.
    Svenning, Jens-Christian
    SCIENCE, 2022, 375 (6577) : 210 - +
  • [3] Estimating the ability of plants to plastically track temperature-mediated shifts in the spring phenological optimum
    Tansey, Christine J.
    Hadfield, Jarrod D.
    Phillimore, Albert B.
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2017, 23 (08) : 3321 - 3334
  • [4] Local adaptation in brown trout early life-history traits: implications for climate change adaptability
    Jensen, Lasse Fast
    Hansen, Michael M.
    Pertoldi, Cino
    Holdensgaard, Gert
    Mensberg, Karen-Lise Dons
    Loeschcke, Volker
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2008, 275 (1653) : 2859 - 2868
  • [5] Effects of competition and life history stage on the expression of local adaptation in two native bunchgrasses
    Rice, Kevin J.
    Knapp, Eric E.
    RESTORATION ECOLOGY, 2008, 16 (01) : 12 - 23
  • [6] The genetic architecture of repeated local adaptation to climate in distantly related plants
    Whiting, James R.
    Booker, Tom R.
    Rougeux, Clement
    Lind, Brandon M.
    Singh, Pooja
    Lu, Mengmeng
    Huang, Kaichi
    Whitlock, Michael C.
    Aitken, Sally N.
    Andrew, Rose L.
    Borevitz, Justin O.
    Bruhl, Jeremy J.
    Collins, Timothy L.
    Fischer, Martin C.
    Hodgins, Kathryn A.
    Holliday, Jason A.
    Ingvarsson, Par K.
    Janes, Jasmine K.
    Khandaker, Momena
    Koenig, Daniel
    Kreiner, Julia M.
    Kremer, Antoine
    Lascoux, Martin
    Leroy, Thibault
    Milesi, Pascal
    Murray, Kevin D.
    Pyhajarvi, Tanja
    Rellstab, Christian
    Rieseberg, Loren H.
    Roux, Fabrice
    Stinchcombe, John R.
    Telford, Ian R. H.
    Todesco, Marco
    Tyrmi, Jaakko S.
    Wang, Baosheng
    Weigel, Detlef
    Willi, Yvonne
    Wright, Stephen I.
    Zhou, Lecong
    Yeaman, Sam
    NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2024, 8 (10): : 1933 - 1947
  • [7] Simulating local adaptation to climate of forest trees with a Physio-Demo-Genetics model
    Oddou-Muratorio, Sylvie
    Davi, Hendrik
    EVOLUTIONARY APPLICATIONS, 2014, 7 (04): : 453 - 467
  • [8] Local adaptation of trees at the range margins impacts range shifts in the face of climate change
    Solarik, Kevin A.
    Messier, Christian
    Ouimet, Rock
    Bergeron, Yves
    Gravel, Dominique
    GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2018, 27 (12): : 1507 - 1519
  • [9] The Life-history Evolution of Plants and Its Relevance to Climate
    Kenta, Tanaka
    JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHY-CHIGAKU ZASSHI, 2019, 128 (01) : 147 - 154
  • [10] Accounting for local adaptation in ectomycorrhizas: a call to track geographical origin of plants, fungi, and soils in experiments
    Megan A. Rúa
    Louis J. Lamit
    Catherine Gehring
    Pedro M. Antunes
    Jason D. Hoeksema
    Cathy Zabinski
    Justine Karst
    Cole Burns
    Michaela J. Woods
    Mycorrhiza, 2018, 28 : 187 - 195