Abstract
In many ecosystems, plant growth and reproduction are nitrogen limited. Current and predicted increases of global reactive nitrogen could alter the ecological and evolutionary trajectories of plant populations. Nitrogen is a major component of nucleic acids and cell structures, and it has been predicted that organisms with larger genomes should require more nitrogen for growth and reproduction and be more negatively affected by nitrogen scarcities than organisms with smaller genomes. In a greenhouse experiment, we tested this hypothesis by examining whether the amount of soil nitrogen supplied differentially influenced the performance (fitness, growth, and resource allocation strategies) of diploid and autotetraploid fireweed (Chamerion angustifolium). We found that soil nitrogen levels differentially impacted cytotype performance, and in general, diploids were favored under low nitrogen conditions, but this diploid advantage disappeared under nitrogen enrichment. Specifically, when nitrogen was scarce, diploids produced more seeds and allocated more biomass toward seed production relative to investment in plant biomass or total plant nitrogen than did tetraploids. As nitrogen supplied increased, such discrepancies between cytotypes disappeared. We also found that cytotype resource allocation strategies were differentially dependent on soil nitrogen, and that whereas diploids adopted resource allocation strategies that favored current season reproduction when nitrogen was limiting and future reproduction when nitrogen was more plentiful, tetraploids adopted resource allocation strategies that favored current season reproduction under nitrogen enrichment. Together these results suggest nitrogen enrichment could differentially affect cytotype performance, which could have implications for cytotypes’ ecological and evolutionary dynamics under a globally changing climate.
Highlights
Whole genome duplication commonly occurs in plants and is an important evolutionary process contributing to both in‐ traspecific genetic and phenotypic variation (Levin, 2002; Otto & Whitton, 2000) and to the formation of new species (Masterson, 1994)
We found that soil nitrogen levels differentially impacted cytotype performance, and in general, diploids were favored under low nitrogen conditions, but this diploid advantage disappeared under nitrogen enrichment
We found that cytotype resource allocation strategies were differentially dependent on soil nitrogen, and that whereas diploids adopted resource allocation strategies that favored current season reproduction when nitro‐ gen was limiting and future reproduction when nitrogen was more plentiful, tetra‐ ploids adopted resource allocation strategies that favored current season reproduction under nitrogen enrichment
Summary
Whole genome duplication (polyploidy) commonly occurs in plants and is an important evolutionary process contributing to both in‐ traspecific genetic and phenotypic variation (Levin, 2002; Otto & Whitton, 2000) and to the formation of new species (Masterson, 1994). A plethora of research has shown that primary producers vary in both their requirements for and responses to available nitrogen (De Schrijver et al, 2011; Wooliver et al, 2014; Xia & Wang, 2008) and that nitrogen enrichment can disproportionately favor some species over others (Chapin, 1980; Suding et al, 2005; Tamm, 1991; Tilman, 1982, 1986) It is not known whether nitrogen enrichment influences the performance of some plants over others based upon their genome size or number of chromo‐ somes (ploidy level). We predicted that because fireweeds are perennial plants, that they would invest more into current season reproductive efforts (more aboveground biomass and reproductive measures) when ni‐ trogen was more plentiful and more into storage
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