Plant-soil interactions during the native and exotic range expansion of an annual plant.

IF 2.1 3区 生物学 Q3 ECOLOGY Journal of Evolutionary Biology Pub Date : 2024-06-28 DOI:10.1093/jeb/voae040
Nicky Lustenhouwer, Tom M R Chaubet, Miranda K Melen, Wim H van der Putten, Ingrid M Parker
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Abstract

Range expansions, whether they are biological invasions or climate change-mediated range shifts, may have profound ecological and evolutionary consequences for plant-soil interactions. Range-expanding plants encounter soil biota with which they have a limited coevolutionary history, especially when introduced to a new continent. Past studies have found mixed results on whether plants experience positive or negative soil feedback interactions in their novel range, and these effects often change over time. One important theoretical explanation is that plants locally adapt to the soil pathogens and mutualists in their novel range. We tested this hypothesis in Dittrichia graveolens, an annual plant that is both expanding its European native range, initially coinciding with climate warming, and rapidly invading California after human introduction. In parallel greenhouse experiments on both continents, we used plant genotypes and soils from 5 locations at the core and edge of each range to compare plant growth in soil inhabited by D. graveolens and nearby control microsites as a measure of plant-soil feedback. Plant-soil interactions were highly idiosyncratic across each range. On average, plant-soil feedbacks were more positive in the native range than in the exotic range. In line with the strongly heterogeneous pattern of soil responses along our biogeographic gradients, we found no evidence for evolutionary differentiation between plant genotypes from the core to the edge of either range. Our results suggest that the evolution of plant-soil interactions during range expansion may be more strongly driven by local evolutionary dynamics varying across the range than by large-scale biogeographic shifts.

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一种一年生植物在本土和外来分布区扩展过程中植物与土壤之间的相互作用。
无论是生物入侵还是气候变化引起的范围转移,范围扩张都可能对植物与土壤的相互作用产生深远的生态和进化影响。扩大范围的植物会遇到与它们共同进化历史有限的土壤生物区系,尤其是当它们被引入新大陆时。过去的研究发现,植物在其新的分布区是否会经历积极或消极的土壤反馈相互作用,结果不一,而且这些影响往往会随着时间的推移而改变。一个重要的理论解释是,植物会在当地适应其新分布区的土壤病原体和互惠物。我们在一种一年生植物 Dittrichia graveolens 中测试了这一假设,这种植物既在扩大其欧洲原生地,最初与气候变暖同时发生,又在人类引入后迅速入侵加利福尼亚。在两大洲平行进行的温室实验中,我们使用了植物基因型和来自每个原产地核心和边缘五个地点的土壤,比较了在D. graveolens栖息的土壤和附近对照微地中的植物生长情况,作为植物-土壤反馈的衡量标准。植物与土壤的相互作用在每个分布区都具有高度的特异性。平均而言,原生地的植物-土壤反馈比外来地更积极。与生物地理梯度上土壤反应的强烈异质性模式相一致的是,我们没有发现任何证据表明,植物基因型之间的进化差异会从两个分布区的核心区扩展到边缘区。我们的研究结果表明,在植物分布区扩展过程中,植物与土壤相互作用的演化可能更多地受到分布区内局部演化动态变化的驱动,而不是大规模生物地理变迁的驱动。
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来源期刊
Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Journal of Evolutionary Biology 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
4.80%
发文量
152
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: It covers both micro- and macro-evolution of all types of organisms. The aim of the Journal is to integrate perspectives across molecular and microbial evolution, behaviour, genetics, ecology, life histories, development, palaeontology, systematics and morphology.
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