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Population Variation, Environmental Gradients, and the Evolutionary Ecology of Plant Defense against Herbivory. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how plant growth and defense traits vary among populations of showy milkweed across different climates and herbivory levels.
  • Herbivore pressure was found to increase in warmer areas, leading to a positive correlation between growth and defense traits in natural populations.
  • In a controlled setting, while some defense traits showed patterns based on climate origin, the relationship between growth and defense traits weakened, indicating that favorable climates may enhance defense without significantly hindering growth.

Article Abstract

A central tenet of plant defense theory is that adaptation to the abiotic environment sets the template for defense strategies, imposing a trade-off between plant growth and defense. Yet this trade-off, commonly found among species occupying divergent resource environments, may not occur across populations of single species. We hypothesized that more favorable climates and higher levels of herbivory would lead to increases in growth and defense across plant populations. We evaluated whether plant growth and defense traits covaried across 18 populations of showy milkweed (Asclepias speciosa) inhabiting an east-west climate gradient spanning 25° of longitude. A suite of traits impacting defense (e.g., latex, cardenolides), growth (e.g., size), or both (e.g., specific leaf area [SLA], trichomes) were measured in natural populations and in a common garden, allowing us to evaluate plastic and genetically based variation in these traits. In natural populations, herbivore pressure increased toward warmer sites with longer growing seasons. Growth and defense traits showed strong clinal patterns and were positively correlated. In a common garden, clines with climatic origin were recapitulated only for defense traits. Correlations between growth and defense traits were also weaker and more negative in the common garden than in the natural populations. Thus, our data suggest that climatically favorable sites likely facilitate the evolution of greater defense at minimal costs to growth, likely because of increased resource acquisition.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/700838DOI Listing

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