Abstract

It is important to investigate the molecular causes of the variation in ecologically important traits to fully understand phenotypic responses to climate change. In the Mississippi River Delta, two distinct, sympatric invasive lineages of common reed (Phragmites australis) are known to differ in several ecophysiological characteristics and are expected to become more salt resistant due to increasing atmospheric CO2 and temperature. We investigated whether different patterns of gene expression can explain their ecophysiological differences and increased vigor under future climatic conditions. We compared the transcript abundance of photosynthetic genes of the Calvin cycle (Rubisco small subunit, RbcS; Phosphoglycerate kinase, PGK; Phosphoribulokinase, PRK), genes related with salt transport (Na+/H+ antiporter, PhaNHA) and oxidative stress response genes (Manganese Superoxide dismutase, MnSOD; Glutathione peroxidase, GPX), and the total aboveground biomass production between two genotypes representing the two lineages. The two genotypes (Delta-type, Mediterranean lineage, and EU-type, Eurasian lineage) were grown under an ambient and a future climate scenario with simultaneously elevated CO2 and temperature, and under two different soil salinities (0‰ or 20‰). We found neither differences in the aboveground biomass production nor the transcript abundances of the two genotypes, but soil salinity significantly affected all the investigated parameters, often interacting with the climatic conditions. At 20‰ salinity, most genes were higher expressed in the future than in the ambient climatic conditions. Higher transcription of the genes suggests higher abundance of the protein they code for, and consequently increased photosynthate production, improved stress responses, and salt exclusion. Therefore, the higher expression of these genes most likely contributed to the significantly ameliorated salinity impact on the aboveground biomass production of both P. australis genotypes under elevated temperature and CO2. Although transcript abundances did not explain differences between the lineages, they correlated with the increased vigor of both lineages under anticipated future climatic conditions.

Highlights

  • Greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere are rising significantly due to anthropogenic fuel burning, with concomitant increases in average global temperature (IPCC 2007; Meehl et al 2012)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • We found that simulated future climatic conditions with elevated CO2 and temperature favoured growth, photosynthesis, water useefficiency and several other ecophysiological traits of these two competing exotic reed lineages

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Summary

Introduction

Greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere are rising significantly due to anthropogenic fuel burning, with concomitant increases in average global temperature (IPCC 2007; Meehl et al 2012). CO2 concentration, one of the major greenhouse gases, has been predicted to reach 700 ppm by the end of the 21st century, double that of just two centuries ago (Barnola et al 1995; IPCC 2007). Among the consequences of global warming are recurring storm events, the thermal expansion of the oceans and the melting of a 2014 The Authors. The resulting seawater expansion into coastal areas is a threat to coastal ecosystems, especially the fresher, upper marsh vegetation

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