4.5 Article

ECOLOGICAL NICHE DIFFERENTIATION OF POLYPLOIDIZATION IS NOT SUPPORTED BY ENVIRONMENTAL DIFFERENCES AMONG SPECIES IN A COSMOPOLITAN GRASS GENUS

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
Volume 102, Issue 1, Pages 36-49

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.1400432

Keywords

canary grass; ecology; niche; Phalaris; Poaceae; polyploidy; whole genome duplication

Categories

Funding

  1. Working for Water Programme via the Centre for Invasion Biology
  2. NRF (Scarce Skills Fellowship)
  3. SANBI Invasive Species Programme
  4. NIFA/USDA HATCH
  5. Vermont Agricultural Experimental Station

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Premise of the study: Polyploidization frequently results in the creation of new plant species, the establishment of which is thought to often be facilitated by ecological niche differentiation from the diploid species. We tested this hypothesis using the cosmopolitan grass genus Phalaris (Poaceae), consisting of 19 species that range from diploid to tetraploid to hexaploid. Specifically, we tested whether (1) polyploids occupy more extreme environments and/or (2) have broader niche breadths and/or (3) whether the polyploid species' distributions indicate a niche shift from diploid species. Methods: We employed a bootstrapping approach using distribution data for each species and eight environmental variables to investigate differences between species in the means, extremes, and breadths of each environmental variable. We used a kernel smoothing technique to quantify niche overlap between species. Key results: Although we found some support for the three hypotheses for a few diploid-polyploid pairs and for specific environmental variables, none of these hypotheses were generally supported. Conclusions: Our results suggest that these commonly held hypotheses about the effects of polyploidization on ecological distributions are not universally applicable. Correlative biogeographic studies like ours provide a necessary first step for suggesting specific hypotheses that require experimental verification. A combination of genetic, physiological, and ecological studies will be required to achieve a better understanding of the role of polyploidization in niche evolution.

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