期刊
ECOLOGY
卷 103, 期 11, 页码 -出版社
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3803
关键词
biological invasion; clinal variation; common garden; lag phase; Persicaria longiseta; plant introduction; Polygonum cespitosum; propagule pressure; range comparison; rapid evolution
类别
资金
- Center for Conservation and Biodiversity
- National Science Foundation
- University of Connecticut, Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
- Wesleyan University, College of Integrative Sciences
- Wesleyan University, College of the Environment
- The Explorers Club
A central question in invasion biology is whether adaptive trait evolution following species introduction promotes invasiveness. A study on Polygonum cespitosum populations compared the traits between native- and introduced-range plants to determine the role of post-introduction adaptive trait evolution in the invasion process. The results showed that the introduced-range populations displayed a novel trait syndrome consisting of a fast-paced life history and sparse growth form, which led to higher fitness and propagule production. Several growth and reproductive traits also showed temperature-based clines, indicating adaptive evolution in the new range. These findings suggest that P. cespitosum has evolved key traits that contribute to its recent transition to invasiveness.
A central question in invasion biology is whether adaptive trait evolution following species introduction promotes invasiveness. A growing number of common-garden experiments document phenotypic differences between native- and introduced-range plants, suggesting that adaptive evolution in the new range may indeed contribute to the success of invasive plants. However, these studies are often subject to methodological pitfalls, resulting in weak evidence for post-introduction adaptive trait evolution and leaving its role in the invasion process uncertain. In a common-garden glasshouse study, we compared the growth, life-history, and reproductive traits of 35 native- and introduced-range Polygonum cespitosum populations. We used complementary approaches including climate-matching, standardizing parental conditions, selection analysis, and testing for trait-environment relationships to determine whether traits that increase invasiveness adaptively evolved in the species' new range. We found that the majority of introduced-range populations exhibited a novel trait syndrome consisting of a fast-paced life history and concomitant sparse, reduced growth form. Selection analysis confirmed that this trait syndrome led to markedly higher fitness (propagule production) over a limited growing season that was characteristic of regions within the introduced range. Additionally, several growth and reproductive traits showed temperature-based clines consistent with adaptive evolution in the new range. Combined, these results indicate that, subsequent to its introduction to North America over 100 generations ago, P. cespitosum has evolved key traits that maximize propagule production. These changes may in part explain the species' recent transition to invasiveness, illustrating how post-introduction evolution may contribute to the invasion process.
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