Among‐population variation in drought responses is consistent across life stages but not between native and non‐native ranges

Author:

Nagy Dávid U.1ORCID,Thoma Arpad E.1ORCID,Al‐Gharaibeh Mohammad2ORCID,Callaway Ragan M.3ORCID,Flory S. Luke4ORCID,Frazee Lauren J.5ORCID,Hartmann Matthias6ORCID,Hensen Isabell17ORCID,Jandová Kateřina8ORCID,Khasa Damase P.9ORCID,Lekberg Ylva1011ORCID,Pal Robert W.12ORCID,Samartza Ioulietta1314ORCID,Shah Manzoor A.15ORCID,Sheng Min16ORCID,Slate Mandy17ORCID,Stein Claudia18ORCID,Tsunoda Tomonori19ORCID,Rosche Christoph17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Biology/Geobotany and Botanical Garden Martin Luther University Halle‐Wittenberg Halle 06108 Germany

2. Department of Plant Production, Faculty of Agriculture Jordan University of Science and Technology Irbid 22110 Jordan

3. Division of Biological Sciences University of Montana Missoula MT 59812 USA

4. Agronomy Department University of Florida Gainesville FL 32611 USA

5. Department of Ecology, Evolution, & Natural Resources Rutgers University New Brunswick NJ 08901 USA

6. Thünen Institute of Biodiversity Braunschweig 38116 Germany

7. German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle‐Jena‐Leipzig Leipzig 04103 Germany

8. Institute for Environmental Studies, Faculty of Science Charles University Prague CZ‐12801 Czech Republic

9. Centre for Forest Research and Institute for Integrative and Systems Biology Université Laval Quebec QC G1V0A6 Canada

10. MPG Ranch Missoula Florence MT 59833 USA

11. Department of Ecosystem and Conservation Sciences, W.A. Franke College of Forestry and Conservation University of Montana Missoula MT 59812 USA

12. Department of Biological Sciences Montana Technological University Butte MT 59701 USA

13. School of Biology Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Thessaloniki 54124 Greece

14. Institute of Plant Breeding and Genetic Resources Hellenic Agricultural Organization Demeter Thessaloniki 57001 Greece

15. Department of Botany University of Kashmir Srinagar Jammu & Kashmir 190006 India

16. College of Forestry Northwest A&F University Yangling Shaanxi 712100 China

17. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Colorado Boulder CO 80309 USA

18. Department of Biology and Environmental Science Auburn University at Montgomery Montgomery AL 36124 USA

19. Bioscience and Biotechnology Fukui Prefectural University Fukui 910‐1195 Japan

Abstract

Summary Understanding how widespread species adapt to variation in abiotic conditions across their ranges is fundamental to ecology. Insight may come from studying how among‐population variation (APV) in the common garden corresponds with the environmental conditions of source populations. However, there are no such studies comparing native vs non‐native populations across multiple life stages. We examined APV in the performance and functional traits of 59 Conyza canadensis populations, in response to drought, across large aridity gradients in the native (North America) and non‐native (Eurasia) ranges in three experiments. Our treatment (dry vs wet) was applied at the recruitment, juvenile, and adult life stages. We found contrasting patterns of APV in drought responses between the two ranges. In the native range, plant performance was less reduced by drought in populations from xeric than mesic habitats, but such relationship was not apparent for non‐native populations. These range‐specific patterns were consistent across the life stages. The weak adaptive responses of non‐native populations indicate that they can become highly abundant even without complete local adaptation to abiotic environments and suggest that long‐established invaders may still be evolving to the abiotic environment. These findings may explain lag times in invasions and raise concern about future expansions.

Funder

Canadian Network for Research and Innovation in Machining Technology, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Ministry of Education, India

Publisher

Wiley

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