Abstract

Gene flow in crop–wild complexes between phenotypically differentiated ancestors may transfer adaptive genetic variation that alters the fecundity and, potentially, the population growth (λ) of weeds. We created biotypes with potentially invasive traits, early flowering or long leaves, in wild radish (Raphanus raphanistrum) and F5 crop–wild hybrid (R. sativus × R. raphanistrum) backgrounds and compared them to randomly mated populations, to provide the first experimental estimate of long‐term fitness consequences of weedy life‐history variation. Using a life table response experiment design, we modeled λ of experimental, field populations in Pellston, MI, and assessed the relative success of alternative weed strategies and the contributions of individual vital rates (germination, survival, seed production) to differences in λ among experimental populations. Growth rates (λ) were most influenced by seed production, a trait altered by hybridization and selection, compared to other vital rates. More seeds were produced by wild than hybrid populations and by long‐leafed than early‐flowering lineages. Although we did not detect a biotype by selection treatment effect on lambda, lineages also exhibited contrasting germination and survival strategies. Identifying life‐history traits affecting population growth contributes to our understanding of which portions of the crop genome are most likely to introgress into weed populations.

Highlights

  • The ecological processes of population growth and persistence are shaped by the evolutionary characteristics of a population, that is, phenotypic frequencies and their relative fitness (Darwin and Wallace 1858; Simpson 1944; Gould 1989)

  • Using genotypes from natural selection experiments, we have studied many aspects of crop-to-wild gene flow and hybrid fitness of radishes in Michigan, California, and Texas, where R. raphanistrum is non-native and, sometimes, weedy

  • Population growth rate did not differ between selection treatments, and there were no significant differences in vital rates among selection treatments

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Summary

Introduction

The ecological processes of population growth and persistence are shaped by the evolutionary characteristics of a population, that is, phenotypic frequencies and their relative fitness (Darwin and Wallace 1858; Simpson 1944; Gould 1989). The Galapagos finches (Geospiza fortis) experienced catastrophic demographic decline during a drought (Grant and Grant 2002); the population crash was subsequently explained, in large part, by slowed evolution due to genetic load (Hairston et al 2005). To complement such natural ‘experiments’, reciprocal translocation experiments show that local adaptation can dramatically affect reproductive success (Kinnison et al 2008; Hereford 2009), a correlation of population growth for many annual plants. Introduction of predators into natural populations of Poecilia reticulata resulted in rapid evolution of key phenotypic (e.g., dulled male coloration) and demographic traits (i.e., delayed maturation and fewer, larger offspring (Reznick and Bryga 1987). Trait evolution is likely a significant driver of population demography

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