Resurrected seeds from herbarium specimens reveal rapid evolution of drought resistance in a selfing annual

Author:

Christie Kyle12ORCID,Pierson Natalie R.1,Holeski Liza M.13ORCID,Lowry David B.24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences Northern Arizona University Flagstaff Arizona 86011 USA

2. Department of Plant Biology Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan 48824 USA

3. Center for Adaptive Western Landscapes Northern Arizona University Flagstaff Arizona 86011 USA

4. Plant Resilience Institute Michigan State University, East Lansing Michigan 48824 USA

Abstract

AbstractPremiseIncreased aridity and drought associated with climate change are exerting unprecedented selection pressures on plant populations. Whether populations can rapidly adapt, and which life history traits might confer increased fitness under drought, remain outstanding questions.MethodsWe utilized a resurrection ecology approach, leveraging dormant seeds from herbarium collections to assess whether populations of Plantago patagonica from the semi‐arid Colorado Plateau have rapidly evolved in response to approximately ten years of intense drought in the region. We quantified multiple traits associated with drought escape and drought resistance and assessed the survival of ancestors and descendants under simulated drought.ResultsDescendant populations displayed a significant shift in resource allocation, in which they invested less in reproductive tissues and relatively more in both above‐ and below‐ground vegetative tissues. Plants with greater leaf biomass survived longer under terminal drought; moreover, even after accounting for the effect of increased leaf biomass, descendant seedlings survived drought longer than their ancestors.ConclusionsOur results document rapid adaptive evolution in response to climate change in a selfing annual and suggest that shifts in tissue allocation strategies may underlie adaptive responses to drought in arid or semi‐arid environments. This work also illustrates a novel approach, documenting that under specific circumstances, seeds from herbarium specimens may provide an untapped source of dormant propagules for future resurrection experiments.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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