Plasticity-mediated persistence and subsequent local adaptation in a global agricultural weed.

Evolution

Kellogg Biological Station and Department of Plant Biology, Michigan State University, Hickory Corners, MI, United States.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Phenotypic plasticity can adjust important traits in organisms that aid in their establishment in new environments before they undergo genetic adaptation.
  • In a study on Raphanus raphanistrum (a problematic weed), researchers compared weedy populations to non-weedy native populations to explore how plasticity helps in colonizing agricultural fields.
  • The findings revealed that many traits were both plastic and genetically different between the weedy and native populations, indicating that plasticity may have facilitated the colonization and adaptation of radish plants in new agricultural settings.

Article Abstract

Phenotypic plasticity can alter traits that are crucial to population establishment in a new environment before adaptation can occur. How often phenotypic plasticity enables subsequent adaptive evolution is unknown, and examples of the phenomenon are limited. We investigated the hypothesis of plasticity-mediated persistence as a means of colonization of agricultural fields in one of the world's worst weeds, Raphanus raphanistrum ssp. raphanistrum. Using non-weedy native populations of the same species and subspecies as a comparison, we tested for plasticity-mediated persistence in a growth chamber reciprocal transplant experiment. We identified traits with genetic differentiation between the weedy and native ecotypes as well as phenotypic plasticity between growth chamber environments. We found that most traits were both plastic and differentiated between ecotypes, with the majority plastic and differentiated in the same direction. This suggests that phenotypic plasticity may have enabled radish populations to colonize and then adapt to novel agricultural environments.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/evolut/qpae109DOI Listing

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