Linking ecological niche models and common garden experiments to predict phenotypic differentiation in stressful environments: Assessing the adaptive value of marginal populations in an alpine plant
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2022-03-31
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John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Resumen
Environmental variation within a species’ range can create contrasting selective pressures, leading to divergent selection and novel adaptations. The conservation value of
populations inhabiting environmentally marginal areas remains in debate and is closely
related to the adaptive potential in changing environments. Strong selection caused
by stressful conditions may generate novel adaptations, conferring these populations
distinct evolutionary potential and high conservation value under climate change. On
the other hand, environmentally marginal populations may be genetically depauperate, with little potential for new adaptations to emerge. Here, we explored the use of
ecological niche models (ENMs) linked with common garden experiments to predict
and test for genetically determined phenotypic differentiation related to contrasting
environmental conditions. To do so, we built an ENM for the alpine plant Silene ciliata
in central Spain and conducted common garden experiments, assessing flowering
phenology changes and differences in leaf cell resistance to extreme temperatures.
The suitability patterns and response curves of the ENM led to the predictions that: (1) the environmentally marginal populations experiencing less snowpack and higher
minimum temperatures would have delayed flowering to avoid risks of late-spring
frosts and (2) those with higher minimum temperatures and greater potential evapotranspiration would show enhanced cell resistance to high temperatures to deal with
physiological stress related to desiccation and heat. The common garden experiments
revealed the expected genetically based phenotypic differentiation in flowering phenology. In contrast, they did not show the expected differentiation for cell resistance,
but these latter experiments had high variance and hence lower statistical power. The
results highlight ENMs as useful tools to identify contrasting putative selective pressures across species ranges. Linking ENMs with common garden experiments provides a theoretically justified and practical way to study adaptive processes, including
insights regarding the conservation value of populations inhabiting environmentally
marginal areas under ongoing climate change.
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Morente‐López, J., Kass, J. M., Lara‐Romero, C., Serra‐Diaz, J. M., Soto‐Correa, J. C., Anderson, R. P., & Iriondo, J. M. (2022). Linking ecological niche models and common garden experiments to predict phenotypic differentiation in stressful environments: Assessing the adaptive value of marginal populations in an alpine plant. Global Change Biology, 28(13), 4143-4162.
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