Both life-history plasticity and local adaptation will shape range-wide responses to climate warming in the tundra plant Silene acaulis

被引:66
作者
DeMarche, Megan L. [1 ]
Doak, Daniel F. [1 ]
Morris, William F. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Colorado, Environm Studies Program, Boulder, CO 80309 USA
[2] Duke Univ, Dept Biol, Durham, NC USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会; 瑞典研究理事会;
关键词
climate change; demographic compensation; geographical distribution; local adaptation; plasticity; EVOLUTIONARY SIGNIFICANCE; DEMOGRAPHIC COMPENSATION; CHANGE IMPACTS; POPULATIONS; COUNTERGRADIENT; EXTINCTION; DISTRIBUTIONS; CONSTRAINTS; PREDICTIONS; PERFORMANCE;
D O I
10.1111/gcb.13990
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Many predictions of how climate change will impact biodiversity have focused on range shifts using species-wide climate tolerances, an approach that ignores the demographic mechanisms that enable species to attain broad geographic distributions. But these mechanisms matter, as responses to climate change could fundamentally differ depending on the contributions of life-history plasticity vs. local adaptation to species-wide climate tolerances. In particular, if local adaptation to climate is strong, populations across a species' rangenot only those at the trailing range edgecould decline sharply with global climate change. Indeed, faster rates of climate change in many high latitude regions could combine with local adaptation to generate sharper declines well away from trailing edges. Combining 15years of demographic data from field populations across North America with growth chamber warming experiments, we show that growth and survival in a widespread tundra plant show compensatory responses to warming throughout the species' latitudinal range, buffering overall performance across a range of temperatures. However, populations also differ in their temperature responses, consistent with adaptation to local climate, especially growing season temperature. In particular, warming begins to negatively impact plant growth at cooler temperatures for plants from colder, northern populations than for those from warmer, southern populations, both in the field and in growth chambers. Furthermore, the individuals and maternal families with the fastest growth also have the lowest water use efficiency at all temperatures, suggesting that a trade-off between growth and water use efficiency could further constrain responses to forecasted warming and drying. Taken together, these results suggest that populations throughout species' ranges could be at risk of decline with continued climate change, and that the focus on trailing edge populations risks overlooking the largest potential impacts of climate change on species' abundance and distribution.
引用
收藏
页码:1614 / 1625
页数:12
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