Responses of a legume to inbreeding and the intensity of novel and familiar stresses

Abstract It is often assumed that the negative effects of inbreeding on fitness (inbreeding depression, ID) are particularly strong under stressful conditions. However, ID may be relatively mild under types of stress that plant populations have experienced for a long time, because environment‐specif...

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Main Authors: Finn Rehling, Diethart Matthies, Tobias Michael Sandner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-02-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4831
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spelling doaj-81e6454663784859b3e6cd1b9694aab92021-04-02T13:05:27ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582019-02-01931255126710.1002/ece3.4831Responses of a legume to inbreeding and the intensity of novel and familiar stressesFinn Rehling0Diethart Matthies1Tobias Michael Sandner2Department of Nature Conservation, Faculty of Biology Philipps‐University Marburg Marburg GermanyDepartment of Ecology, Faculty of Biology Philipps‐University Marburg Marburg GermanyDepartment of Ecology, Faculty of Biology Philipps‐University Marburg Marburg GermanyAbstract It is often assumed that the negative effects of inbreeding on fitness (inbreeding depression, ID) are particularly strong under stressful conditions. However, ID may be relatively mild under types of stress that plant populations have experienced for a long time, because environment‐specific deleterious alleles may already have been purged. We examined the performance of open‐ and self‐pollinated progeny of the short‐lived calcareous grassland plant Anthyllis vulneraria under three intensities of each of five types of stress. Drought, nutrient deficiency, and defoliation were chosen as stresses typical for the habitat of origin, while shade and waterlogging were expected to be novel, unfamiliar stresses for A. vulneraria. The stresses reduced plant biomass by up to 91%, and the responses of the plants were mostly in line with the functional equilibrium hypothesis. There was significant ID in biomass (δ = 0.17), leaf chlorophyll content, and the number of root nodules of the legume, but the magnitude of ID was independent of the stress treatments. In particular, there was no significant interaction between inbreeding and the intensity of any stress type, and ID was not higher under novel than under familiar stresses. In addition, phenotypic plasticity in biomass allocation, leaf functional traits and in root nodulation of the legume to the various stress treatments was not influenced by inbreeding. Our findings do not support the common hypothesis of stronger ID under stressful environments, not even if the stresses are novel to the plants.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4831biomass allocationfunctional traitsinbreeding depressionpurgingrhizobia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Finn Rehling
Diethart Matthies
Tobias Michael Sandner
spellingShingle Finn Rehling
Diethart Matthies
Tobias Michael Sandner
Responses of a legume to inbreeding and the intensity of novel and familiar stresses
Ecology and Evolution
biomass allocation
functional traits
inbreeding depression
purging
rhizobia
author_facet Finn Rehling
Diethart Matthies
Tobias Michael Sandner
author_sort Finn Rehling
title Responses of a legume to inbreeding and the intensity of novel and familiar stresses
title_short Responses of a legume to inbreeding and the intensity of novel and familiar stresses
title_full Responses of a legume to inbreeding and the intensity of novel and familiar stresses
title_fullStr Responses of a legume to inbreeding and the intensity of novel and familiar stresses
title_full_unstemmed Responses of a legume to inbreeding and the intensity of novel and familiar stresses
title_sort responses of a legume to inbreeding and the intensity of novel and familiar stresses
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Abstract It is often assumed that the negative effects of inbreeding on fitness (inbreeding depression, ID) are particularly strong under stressful conditions. However, ID may be relatively mild under types of stress that plant populations have experienced for a long time, because environment‐specific deleterious alleles may already have been purged. We examined the performance of open‐ and self‐pollinated progeny of the short‐lived calcareous grassland plant Anthyllis vulneraria under three intensities of each of five types of stress. Drought, nutrient deficiency, and defoliation were chosen as stresses typical for the habitat of origin, while shade and waterlogging were expected to be novel, unfamiliar stresses for A. vulneraria. The stresses reduced plant biomass by up to 91%, and the responses of the plants were mostly in line with the functional equilibrium hypothesis. There was significant ID in biomass (δ = 0.17), leaf chlorophyll content, and the number of root nodules of the legume, but the magnitude of ID was independent of the stress treatments. In particular, there was no significant interaction between inbreeding and the intensity of any stress type, and ID was not higher under novel than under familiar stresses. In addition, phenotypic plasticity in biomass allocation, leaf functional traits and in root nodulation of the legume to the various stress treatments was not influenced by inbreeding. Our findings do not support the common hypothesis of stronger ID under stressful environments, not even if the stresses are novel to the plants.
topic biomass allocation
functional traits
inbreeding depression
purging
rhizobia
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4831
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