Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-2-2016
Abstract
1.Global climate models suggest that many ecosystems will experience reduced precipitation over the next century and the consequences for invasive plant performance are largely unknown. Annual invasive species may be able to quickly evolve traits associated with drought escape or tolerance through rapid genetic changes.
2.We investigated the influence of five years of water and nitrogen manipulations on trait values in a southern California grassland system. Seeds from two annual grass species (Avena barbata, Bromus madritensis) were collected from experimental plots and grown in a common environment over two generations. We measured 14 physiological, morphological, phenological, and reproductive traits.
3.Both species displayed phenotypic differences depending on the water treatment from which they were collected, but not depending on the nitrogen treatment. Both species displayed trait values characteristic of drought escape (e.g., earlier flowering in A. barbata and B. madritensis, lower water-use efficiency in B. madritensis) when grown from seeds collected from plots that experienced five years of reduced precipitation. Furthermore, A. barbata individuals grown from seeds collected from drought plots had higher reproductive output and higher photosynthetic performance than individuals grown from water addition plots, with individuals grown from ambient plots displaying intermediate trait values. Notably, we found no phenotypic variation among treatments for six root traits.
4.Synthesis. Trait differences were observed following two generations in a common garden, suggesting that treatment differences were genetically based. This suggests that populations were responding to selection over the five years of water manipulations, a remarkably short time period. The rapid evolutionary responses observed here may help these two widespread invasive grass species thrive under reduced precipitation scenarios, which could have important implications for fire dynamics, invasive species management, and native plant restoration in communities invaded by annual grasses.
Recommended Citation
Nguyen, M. A., Ortega, A. E., Nguyen, K. Q., Kimball, S., Goulden, M. L. and Funk, J. L. (2016), Evolutionary responses of invasive grass species to variation in precipitation and soil nitrogen. J Ecol, 104: 979–986. doi:10.1111/1365-2745.12582
Copyright
Wiley
Included in
Botany Commons, Environmental Sciences Commons, Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Commons, Other Plant Sciences Commons, Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology Commons
Comments
This is the accepted version of the following article:
Nguyen, M. A., Ortega, A. E., Nguyen, K. Q., Kimball, S., Goulden, M. L. and Funk, J. L. (2016), Evolutionary responses of invasive grass species to variation in precipitation and soil nitrogen. J Ecol, 104: 979–986. doi:10.1111/1365-2745.12582
which has been published in final form at DOI: 10.1111/1365-2745.12582. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Self-Archiving.