4.7 Article

A discordance of seasonally covarying cues uncovers misregulated phenotypes in the heterophyllous pitcher plant Cephalotus follicularis

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2020.2568

Keywords

phenotypic plasticity; carnivorous plants; hidden reaction norm

Funding

  1. MEXT/JSPS KAKENHI [12J04926, 22128001, 22128002, 17H06390]
  2. Sofja Kovalevskaja programme from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17H06390, 12J04926, 22128002] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Organisms can adapt to environmental fluctuations by producing a genetically programmed set of phenotypes, but extreme conditions may reveal hidden phenotypic misregulation. The combinatorial effects of environmental factors on phenotypic response norms are not well understood, especially in unusual combinations. These findings are crucial for understanding how climate change may challenge organisms not only through extreme cues, but also through uncommon combinations of benign cues.
Organisms withstand normal ranges of environmental fluctuations by producing a set of phenotypes genetically programmed as a reaction norm; however, extreme conditions can expose a misregulation of phenotypes called a hidden reaction norm. Although an environment consists of multiple factors, how combinations of these factors influence a reaction norm is not well understood. To elucidate the combinatorial effects of environmental factors, we studied the leaf shape plasticity of the carnivorous pitcher plant Cephalotus follicularis. Clonally propagated plants were subjected to 12-week-long growth experiments in different conditions controlled by growth chambers. Here, we show that the dimorphic response of forming a photosynthetic flat leaf or an insect-trapping pitcher leaf is regulated by two covarying environmental cues: temperature and photoperiod. Even within the normal ranges of temperature and photoperiod, unusual combinations of the two induced the production of malformed leaves that were rarely observed under the environmentally typical combinations. We identified such cases in combinations of a summer temperature with a short-to-neutral day length, whose average frequency in the natural Cephalotus habitats corresponded to a once-in-a-lifetime event for this perennial species. Our results suggest that even if individual cues are within the range of natural fluctuations, a hidden reaction norm can be exposed under their discordant combinations. We anticipate that climate change may challenge organismal responses through not only extreme cues but also through uncommon combinations of benign cues.

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