Abstract

Functional plant traits are likely to adapt under the sustained pressure imposed by environmental changes through natural selection. Employing Brassica napus as a model, a multi-generational study was performed to investigate the potential trajectories of selection at elevated [CO2] in two different temperature regimes. To reveal phenotypic divergence at the manipulated [CO2] and temperature conditions, a full-factorial natural selection regime was established in a phytotron environment over the range of four generations. It is demonstrated that a directional response to selection at elevated [CO2] led to higher quantities of reproductive output over the range of investigated generations independent of the applied temperature regime. The increase in seed yield caused an increase in aboveground biomass. This suggests quantitative changes in the functions of carbon sequestration of plants subjected to increased levels of CO2 over the generational range investigated. The results of this study suggest that phenotypic divergence of plants selected under elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration may drive the future functions of plant productivity to be different from projections that do not incorporate selection responses of plants. This study accentuates the importance of phenotypic responses across multiple generations in relation to our understanding of biogeochemical dynamics of future ecosystems. Furthermore, the positive selection response of reproductive output under increased [CO2] may ameliorate depressions in plant reproductive fitness caused by higher temperatures in situations where both factors co-occur.

Highlights

  • Recent and projected future alterations of environmental features cause sustained pressures on global ecosystem functioning (Fischlin et al 2007)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • This study aimed to reveal if the manipulation of CO2 and temperature regimes is able to provide selection pressures, which are strong enough to drive phenotypic divergence over a short range of progressing generations

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Summary

Introduction

Recent and projected future alterations of environmental features cause sustained pressures on global ecosystem functioning (Fischlin et al 2007). Important environmental parameters are currently changing at an unprecedented pace as a consequence of human activities (Bell and Collins 2008). Where the plastic response potential of a population cannot fully compensate stressful changes in environmental conditions, only evolutionary adaptation can prevent wide-ranging declines in fitness and counter the increased risk of extinction (Jump and Pen~uelas 2005). For sessile organisms like plants, where migration likely fails to track the speed and magnitude of environmental change, adaptive responses will be of eminent importance.

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