Abstract
Many desiccation-tolerant plants are widely distributed and exposed to substantial environmental variation across their native range. These environmental differences generate site-specific selective pressures that could drive natural variation in desiccation tolerance across populations. If identified, such natural variation can be used to target tolerance-enhancing characteristics and identify trait associations within a common genetic background. Here, we tested for natural variation in desiccation tolerance across wild populations of the South African resurrection plant Myrothamnus flabellifolia. We surveyed a suite of functional traits related to desiccation tolerance, leaf economics, and reproductive allocation in M. flabellifolia to test for trait associations and tradeoffs. Despite consid-erable environmental variation across the study area, M. flabellifolia plants were extremely desiccation tolerant at all sites, suggesting that tolerance is either maintained by selection or fixed in these popu-lations. However, we detected notable associations between environmental variation, population characteristics, and fitness traits. Relative to mesic sites, plants in xeric sites were more abundant and larger, but were slower growing and less reproductive. The negative association between growth and reproduction with plant size and abundance pointed towards a potential growth–abundance tradeoff. The finding that M. flabellifolia is more common in xeric sites despite reductions in growth rate and reproduction suggests that these plants thrive in extreme aridity.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 1332 |
Journal | Plants |
Volume | 11 |
Issue number | 10 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - May 1 2022 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
Funding
This work was supported by an NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Biology to R.A.M. (PRFB-1906094), the Plant Resilience Institute at Michigan State University, and the South African Department of Science and Innovation and National Research Foundation to J.M.F. (Grant No. 98406). Funding: This work was supported by an NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Biology to R.A.M. (PRFB-1906094), the Plant Resilience Institute at Michigan State University, and the South African Department of Science and Innovation and National Research Foundation to J.M.F. (Grant No. 98406).
Funders | Funder number |
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Michigan State University Plant Resilience Institute | |
Department of Science and Innovation, South Africa | |
U.S. Department of Energy Chinese Academy of Sciences Guangzhou Municipal Science and Technology Project Oak Ridge National Laboratory Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment National Science Foundation National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center National Natural Science Foundation of China | PRFB-1906094 |
National Research Foundation South African Research Chair | 98406 |
Keywords
- Myrothamnus flabellifolia
- South Africa
- abiotic stress
- desiccation tolerance
- drought
- extremophyte
- resurrection plant
- tradeoffs
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
- Ecology
- Plant Science