Effects of parental drought on offspring fitness vary among populations of a crop wild relative
Fecha
2022-08-31
Título de la revista
ISSN de la revista
Título del volumen
Editor
The Royal Society
Resumen
Transgenerational plasticity is a form of non-genetic inheritance that can
reduce or enhance offspring fitness depending on parental stress. Yet, the
adaptive value of such parental environmental effects and whether their
expression varies among populations remain largely unknown. We used
self-fertilized lines from climatically distinct populations of the crop wild
relative Lupinus angustifolius. In the parental generation, full-siblings were
grown in two contrasting watering environments. Then, to robustly separate
the within-generation and transgenerational response to drought, we
reciprocally assigned the offspring of parents to the same experimental treatments.
We measured key functional traits and assessed lifetime reproductive
fitness. Offspring of drought-stressed parents produced less reproductive
biomass, but a similar number of lighter seeds, in dry soil compared to
offspring of genetically identical, well-watered parents, an effect not
mediated by differences in seed provisioning. Importantly, while the offspring
of parents grown in the favourable environment responded to
drought by slightly increasing individual seed mass, the pattern of plasticity
of the offspring of drought-grown parents showed the opposite direction,
and the negative effects of parental drought on seed mass were more pronounced
in populations from cooler and moist habitats. Overall, our
results show that parental effects may override immediate adaptive
responses to drought and provide evidence of population-level variation
in the expression of transgenerational plasticity.
Descripción
Palabras clave
Citación
Matesanz S, Ramos-Muñoz M, Rubio Teso ML, Iriondo JM. 2022 Effects of parental drought on offspring fitness vary among populations of a crop wild relative. Proc. R. Soc. B 289: 20220065. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2022.0065