Premise Of The Study: Many plants increase reproduction in response to rising levels of atmospheric CO . However, environmental and genetic variation across heterogeneous landscapes can lead to intraspecific differences in the partitioning of CO -induced carbon gains to reproductive tissue relative to growth.
Methods: We measured the effects of rising atmospheric CO on biomass allocation in the allergenic plant Ambrosia artemisiifolia (common ragweed) across a geographic climate gradient. We grew plants from three latitudes at 400, 600, and 800 µL·L CO and analyzed biomass allocation and natural selection on flowering phenology and growth.
Key Results: Both the latitude of origin and CO treatment had significant effects on allocation and on estimates of selection. Northern plants were under stronger selection than southern plants to flower quickly, and they produced larger seeds and more reproductive mass per unit of growth. Northern plants were under stronger selection than southern plants to flower quickly, and they produced larger seeds and more reproductive mass per unit of growth. While all plants grew larger and produced heavier seeds at higher CO , only northern plants increased male flower production. Both size and time to flowering were under selection, with a relaxation of the size-fitness function in northern ecotypes at high CO .
Conclusions: Northern ecotypes allocate more CO -induced carbon gains to reproduction than do southern plants, pointing to a geographic gradient in future pollen and seed production by this species arising from local adaptation. Relaxed selection on size at elevated CO could amplify reproductive enhancements to northern ecotypes, although more growth and seed provisioning can be expected overall. Our results demonstrate potential for ecotypic divergence in ragweed responses to climate change.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.3732/ajb.1700222 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!