Abstract

Niche divergence between polyploids and their lower ploidy progenitors is one of the primary mechanisms fostering polyploid establishment and adaptive divergence. However, within-species chromosomal and reproductive variability have usually been neglected in community ecology and biodiversity analyses even though they have been recognized to play a role in the adaptive diversification of lineages. We used Paspalum intermedium, a grass species with diverging genetic systems (diploidy vs. autopolyploidy, allogamy vs. autogamy and sexuality vs. apomixis), to recognize the causality of biogeographic patterns, adaptation and ecological flexibility of cytotypes. Chromosome counts and flow cytometry were used to characterize within-species genetic systems diversity. Environmental niche modelling was used to evaluate intraspecific ecological attributes associated with environmental and climatic factors and to assess correlations among ploidy, reproductive modes and ecological conditions ruling species' population dynamics, range expansion, adaptation and evolutionary history. Two dominant cytotypes non-randomly distributed along local and regional geographical scales displayed niche differentiation, a directional shift in niche optima and signs of disruptive selection on ploidy-related ecological aptitudes for the exploitation of environmental resources. Ecologically specialized allogamous sexual diploids were found in northern areas associated with higher temperature, humidity and productivity, while generalist autogamous apomictic tetraploids occurred in southern areas, occupying colder and less productive environments. Four localities with a documented shift in ploidy and four mixed populations in a zone of ecological transition revealed an uneven replacement between cytotypes. Polyploidy and contrasting reproductive traits between cytotypes have promoted shifts in niche optima, and increased ecological tolerance and niche divergence. Ecologically specialized diploids maintain cytotype stability in core areas by displacing tetraploids, while broader ecological preferences and a shift from sexuality to apomixis favoured polyploid colonization in peripheral areas where diploids are displaced, and fostered the ecological opportunity for autotetraploids supporting range expansion to open southern habitats.

Highlights

  • Polyploidy is considered a widespread and ubiquitous phenomenon in the evolutionary history of species (Otto and Whitton, 2000; Van de Peer et al, 2017)

  • Specialized allogamous sexual diploids were found in northern areas associated with higher temperature, humidity and productivity, while generalist autogamous apomictic tetraploids occurred in southern areas, occupying colder and less productive environments

  • Even though the causality and consequences of polyploidy are better known than when it was discovered around 100 years ago, we are just starting to understand the complex dynamics of polyploidization and its consequences for the ecological adaptation and evolution of taxa (Ramsey and Ramsey, 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

Polyploidy is considered a widespread and ubiquitous phenomenon in the evolutionary history of species (Otto and Whitton, 2000; Van de Peer et al, 2017). The present advent of new data and methods has propelled a tremendous interest in polyploidy, especially in plant sciences (Madlung, 2013; Soltis et al, 2014). Even though the causality and consequences of polyploidy are better known than when it was discovered around 100 years ago, we are just starting to understand the complex dynamics of polyploidization and its consequences for the ecological adaptation and evolution of taxa (Ramsey and Ramsey, 2014). Biogeographical surveys on polyploid species suggest that multiple sets of chromosomes provide polyploids with short- and long-term advantages to better deal with environmental changes, range shifts, persistence across heterogeneous landscapes and colonization of new habitats Polyploidization is a major driving force of genetic and ecological change, and a platform for speciation of vascular plants (Husband et al, 2013).

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