Geographic variation in leaf traits and palatability of a native plant invader during domestic expansion.

Ecology Pub Date : 2024-09-23 DOI:10.1002/ecy.4425
Yu-Jie Zhao, Shengyu Wang, Zhi-Yong Liao, Madalin Parepa, Lei Zhang, Peipei Cao, Jingwen Bi, Yaolin Guo, Oliver Bossdorf, Christina L Richards, Jihua Wu, Bo Li, Rui-Ting Ju
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Abstract

Like alien plant invasion, range expansion of native plants may threaten biodiversity and economies, rendering them native invaders. Variation in abiotic and biotic conditions across a large geographic scale greatly affects variation in traits and interactions with herbivores of native plant invaders, which is an interesting yet mostly unexplored issue. We used a common garden experiment to compare defensive/nutritional traits and palatability to generalist herbivores of 20 native (23.64° N-30.18° N) and introduced range (31.58° N-36.87° N) populations of Reynoutria japonica, which is a native invader following range expansion in China. We analyzed the relationships among herbivore pressure, climate, plant chloroplast haplotypes, leaf traits, and herbivore performance. Of the 16 variables tested, we observed range differences in 11 variables and latitudinal clines in nine variables. In general, herbivores performed better on the introduced plants than on the native plants, and better on the high-latitude plants than on the low-latitude plants within the introduced populations. Three key traits (leaf thickness, specific leaf area, and carbon-to-nitrogen [C:N] ratio) determined palatability to herbivores and were significantly associated with temperature and/or precipitation of plant provenance as well as with plant haplotypes but not with herbivore pressure. Our results revealed a causal sequence from plant-range-based environmental forces and genetic context to plant quality and palatability to herbivores in R. japonica. These findings suggest a post-introduction evolution of R. japonica, which may partly explain the colonization success of this important native, but invasive plant.

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一种本地植物入侵者的叶片特征和适口性在国内扩张过程中的地理变异。
与外来植物入侵一样,本地植物的分布范围扩大可能会威胁生物多样性和经济,使其成为本地入侵者。在大地理范围内,非生物和生物条件的差异会极大地影响本地植物入侵者的性状以及与食草动物之间相互作用的差异,这是一个有趣但大多尚未探索的问题。我们利用一个普通花园实验,比较了20个原生(北纬23.64°-30.18°)和引入(北纬31.58°-36.87°)种群的Reynoutria japonica的防御/营养性状和对食草动物的适口性。我们分析了食草动物压力、气候、植物叶绿体单倍型、叶片性状和食草动物表现之间的关系。在所测试的 16 个变量中,我们观察到 11 个变量存在分布区差异,9 个变量存在纬度支系。一般来说,食草动物在引入种群中对引入植物的表现优于对本地植物的表现,对高纬度植物的表现优于对低纬度植物的表现。三个关键性状(叶片厚度、比叶面积和碳氮比)决定了食草动物的适口性,它们与植物产地的温度和/或降水量以及植物单倍型显著相关,但与食草动物的压力无关。我们的研究结果揭示了从基于植物范围的环境作用力和遗传背景到植物质量和食草动物适口性的因果序列。这些研究结果表明,R. japonica 在引入后发生了进化,这可能在一定程度上解释了这种重要的本地入侵植物的成功定殖。
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