4.5 Article

Functional responses to climate change may increase invasive potential of Carpobrotus edulis

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
Volume 108, Issue 10, Pages 1902-1916

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajb2.1745

Keywords

Aizoaceae; biomass allocation patterns; ecophysiology; evolutionary change; global warming; ice plant; invasive species; isotope composition; photoprotection; pigment contents

Categories

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness
  2. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) [CGL2013-48885-C2-2-R, CGL2017-87294-C3-1-P]

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The study investigated the impact of climate change on the ecophysiological performance of Carpobrotus edulis, a South African plant, and found that expected climate changes may further promote its invasion. Invasive populations showed differences in survival and functional traits compared to native populations, supporting the invasiveness hypothesis.
Premise Biological invasions and climate change are major threats to biodiversity. It is therefore important to anticipate how the climate changes projected for Southern Europe would affect the ecophysiological performance of the invasive South African plant, Carpobrotus edulis (ice plant or sour fig), and its capacity to undergo rapid adaptive evolution. Methods We manipulated the climate conditions in a field plot located on the island of Salvora (northwest of the Iberian Peninsula) to establish a full factorial experiment with C. edulis plants transplanted from four native (southern African) and four invasive (northwestern Iberian Peninsula) populations. Throughout 14 months we measured growth and functional traits of this species under two temperatures (control vs. increased), and two rainfall levels (control vs. reduced). Results Temperature increased photochemical efficiency and relative growth rate of C. edulis. Rainfall modulated some of the effects of temperature on C and N isotopic composition, and pigment contents. Invasive populations showed lower root mass allocation and higher survival rates, as well as increased water use efficiency, lipid peroxidation, chlorophyll, and xanthophyll cycle pigment contents than native populations. Conclusions The increased growth and physiological performances observed under our experimental conditions suggest that the expected climate changes would further promote the invasion of C. edulis. Differences between native and invasive genotypes in survival and functional traits revealed that populations have diverged during the process of invasion, what gives support to the invasiveness hypothesis. Our findings highlight the importance of analyzing intraspecific variability in functional responses to better predict how invasive species will respond to environmental changes.

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