4.8 Article

Earlier snow melt and reduced summer precipitation alter floral traits important to pollination

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 1, Pages 323-339

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15908

Keywords

climate change; drought; floral morphology; floral rewards; Ipomopsis; phenotypic plasticity; precipitation; snow melt timing

Funding

  1. NSF [DEB-1654655]

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Climate change can influence the expression of floral traits in plants, with reduced summer precipitation and earlier snow melt potentially leading to plastic responses in flower morphology and reproductive success. The interaction between snow melt timing and summer precipitation levels can affect traits such as corolla length, style length, and nectar production, with drier soil conditions during the flowering period playing a key role in driving trait plasticity. The combined effects of early snow melt and reduced precipitation are important factors driving phenotypic plasticity in plants, particularly in snow-dominated ecosystems.
Climate change can cause changes in expression of organismal traits that influence fitness. In flowering plants, floral traits can respond to drought, and that phenotypic plasticity has the potential to affect pollination and plant reproductive success. Global climate change is leading to earlier snow melt in snow-dominated ecosystems as well as affecting precipitation during the growing season, but the effects of snow melt timing on floral morphology and rewards remain unknown. We conducted crossed manipulations of spring snow melt timing (early vs. control) and summer monsoon precipitation (addition, control, and reduction) that mimicked recent natural variation, and examined plastic responses in floral traits of Ipomopsis aggregata over 3 years in the Rocky Mountains. We tested whether increased summer precipitation compensated for earlier snow melt, and if plasticity was associated with changes in soil moisture and/or leaf gas exchange. Lower summer precipitation decreased corolla length, style length, corolla width, sepal width, and nectar production, and increased nectar concentration. Earlier snow melt (taking into account natural and experimental variation) had the same effects on those traits and decreased inflorescence height. The effect of reduced summer precipitation was stronger in earlier snow melt years for corolla length and sepal width. Trait reductions were explained by drier soil during the flowering period, but this effect was only partially explained by how drier soils affected plant water stress, as measured by leaf gas exchange. We predicted the effects of plastic trait changes on pollinator visitation rates, pollination success, and seed production using prior studies on I. aggregata. The largest predicted effect of drier soil on relative fitness components via plasticity was a decrease in male fitness caused by reduced pollinator rewards (nectar production). Early snow melt and reduced precipitation are strong drivers of phenotypic plasticity, and both should be considered when predicting effects of climate change on plant traits in snow-dominated ecosystems.

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