4.6 Article

Evolution and ecology meet molecular genetics: adaptive phenotypic plasticity in two isolated Negev desert populations of Acacia raddiana at either end of a rainfall gradient

Journal

ANNALS OF BOTANY
Volume 109, Issue 1, Pages 247-255

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcr276

Keywords

Phenotypic plasticity; genotype x environment interactions; reaction norms; trade-off; antiherbivore defence; resource availability hypothesis; local adaptation; Negev desert; Acacia raddiana; rainfall gradient

Categories

Funding

  1. Keren Keyemet L'Israel
  2. Israeli Ministry of Science
  3. German Ministry of Environmental Affairs DISUM [00046A]
  4. Ramon Science Center
  5. Local Council of Mizpe Ramon

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Background and Aims The ecological, evolutionary and genetic bases of population differentiation in a variable environment are often related to the selection pressures that plants experience. We compared differences in several growth-and defence-related traits in two isolated populations of Acacia raddiana trees from sites at either end of an extreme environmental gradient in the Negev desert. Methods We used random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) to determine the molecular differences between populations. We grew plants under two levels of water, three levels of nutrients and three levels of herbivory to test for phenotypic plasticity and adaptive phenotypic plasticity. Key Results The RAPD analyses showed that these populations are highly genetically differentiated. Phenotypic plasticity in various morphological traits in A. raddiana was related to patterns of population genetic differentiation between the two study sites. Although we did not test for maternal effects in these long-lived trees, significant genotype x environment (G x E) interactions in some of these traits indicated that such plasticity may be adaptive. Conclusions The main selection pressure in this desert environment, perhaps unsurprisingly, is water. Increased water availability resulted in greater growth in the southern population, which normally receives far less rain than the northern population. Even under the conditions that we defined as low water and/or nutrients, the performance of the seedlings from the southern population was significantly better, perhaps reflecting selection for these traits. Consistent with previous studies of this genus, there was no evidence of trade-offs between physical and chemical defences and plant growth parameters in this study. Rather, there appeared to be positive correlations between plant size and defence parameters. The great variation in several traits in both populations may result in a diverse potential for responding to selection pressures in different environments.

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