Tradeoffs between phenotypic plasticity and local adaptation influence the ecophysiology of the moss, Sphagnum magellanicum

Tobi A. Oke, Merritt R. Turetsky, David J. Weston, Jonathan A. Shaw

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Scopus citations

Abstract

Bryophytes are a diverse plant group and are functionally different from vascular plants. Yet, their peculiarities are rarely considered in the theoretical frameworks for plants. Currently, we lack information about the magnitude and the importance of intraspecific variability in the ecophysiology of bryophytes and how these might translate to local adaptation—a prerequisite for adaptive evolution. Capitalizing on two ecologically distinct (hummock and hollow) phenotypes of Sphagnum magellanicum, we explored the magnitude and pattern of intraspecific variability in this species and asked whether the environmental-mediated changes in shoot and physiological traits are due to phenotypic plasticity or local adaptation. Size, pigmentation, and habitat type that distinguished the phenotypes in the field did not influence the trait responses under a transplant and factorial experiment. In addition, the magnitude and pattern of trait variability (e.g., branch, stem and capitulum mass) changed with the treatments, which suggest that trait responses were due largely to phenotypic plasticity. The trait responses also suggest that the ecophysiological needs for mosses to grow in clumps, where they maintain a uniform growth may have an overriding effect over the potential for a fixed adaptive response to environmental heterogeneity, which would constrain local adaptation. We conclude that extending the trait-based framework to mosses or making comparisons between mosses and vascular plants under any theoretical framework would only be meaningful to the extent that growth form and dispersal strategies are considered.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)867-877
Number of pages11
JournalOecologia
Volume193
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 1 2020

Funding

The authors thank Mike Mucci and Tannis Slimmon for their technical and material supports in the phytotron. We also thank Sarah McDonald and Rebecca Evans for their assistance with the greenhouse and lab measurements. We thank the two anonymous reviewers and the handling editor for their constructive comments that helped improve the manuscript. This work was supported by an NSERC Discovery grant to MRT.

Keywords

  • Bryophytes
  • Environmental heterogeneity
  • Intraspecific trait variation
  • Morphological integration
  • Plant growth form
  • Transplant experiment

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