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2.
Evolution ; 73(9): 1746-1758, 2019 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31432512

ABSTRACT

The immediate capacity for adaptation under current environmental conditions is directly proportional to the additive genetic variance for fitness, VA (W). Mean absolute fitness, W¯ , is predicted to change at the rate VA(W)W¯ , according to Fisher's Fundamental Theorem of Natural Selection. Despite ample research evaluating degree of local adaptation, direct assessment of VA (W) and the capacity for ongoing adaptation is exceedingly rare. We estimated VA (W) and W¯ in three pedigreed populations of annual Chamaecrista fasciculata, over three years in the wild. Contrasting with common expectations, we found significant VA (W) in all populations and years, predicting increased mean fitness in subsequent generations (0.83 to 6.12 seeds per individual). Further, we detected two cases predicting "evolutionary rescue," where selection on standing VA (W) was expected to increase fitness of declining populations ( W¯ < 1.0) to levels consistent with population sustainability and growth. Within populations, inter-annual differences in genetic expression of fitness were striking. Significant genotype-by-year interactions reflected modest correlations between breeding values across years, indicating temporally variable selection at the genotypic level that could contribute to maintaining VA (W). By directly estimating VA (W) and total lifetime W¯ , our study presents an experimental approach for studies of adaptive capacity in the wild.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/genetics , Chamaecrista/genetics , Genetic Fitness , Genetic Variation , Biological Evolution , Genetics, Population , Genotype , Geography , Models, Genetic , Pedigree , Seasons , Seeds , Selection, Genetic , Time Factors
3.
Evolution ; 72(11): 2537-2545, 2018 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30267420

ABSTRACT

Despite the importance of adaptation in shaping biological diversity over many generations, little is known about populations' capacities to adapt at any particular time. Theory predicts that a population's rate of ongoing adaptation is the ratio of its additive genetic variance for fitness, VA(W) , to its mean absolute fitness, W¯ . We conducted a transplant study to quantify W¯ and standing VA(W) for a population of the annual legume Chamaecrista fasciculata in one field site from which we initially sampled it and another site where it does not currently occur naturally. We also examined genotype-by-environment interactions, G × E, as well as its components, differences between sites in VA(W) and in rank of breeding values for fitness. The mean fitness indicated population persistence in both sites, and there was substantial VA(W) for ongoing adaptation at both sites. Statistically significant G × E indicated that the adaptive process would differ between sites. We found a positive correlation between fitness of genotypes in the "home" and "away" environments, and G × E was more pronounced as the life-cycle proceeds. This study exemplifies an approach to assessing whether there is sufficient VA(W) to support evolutionary rescue in populations that are declining.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/genetics , Chamaecrista/genetics , Chamaecrista/growth & development , Environment , Genetic Fitness , Genotype , Minnesota
4.
Am J Bot ; 105(4): 796-802, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29768658

ABSTRACT

PREMISE OF THE STUDY: Mutualistic relationships with microbes may aid plants in overcoming environmental stressors and increase the range of abiotic environments where plants can persist. Rhizobia, nitrogen-fixing bacteria associated with legumes, often confer fitness benefits to their host plants by increasing access to nitrogen in nitrogen-limited soils, but effects of rhizobia on host fitness under other stresses, such as drought, remain unclear. METHODS: In this greenhouse study, we varied the application of rhizobia (Bradyrhizobium sp.) inoculum and drought to examine whether the fitness benefits of rhizobia to their host, partridge pea (Chamaecrista fasciculata), would differ between drought and well-watered conditions. Plants were harvested 9 weeks after seeds were sown. KEY RESULTS: Young C. fasciculata plants that had been inoculated had lower biomass, leaf relative growth rate, and stem relative growth rate compared to young uninoculated plants in both drought and well-watered environments. CONCLUSIONS: Under the conditions of this study, the rhizobial interaction imposed a net cost to their hosts early in development. Potential reasons for this cost include allocating more carbon to nodule and root development than to aboveground growth and a geographic mismatch between the source populations of host plants and rhizobia. If developing plants incur such costs from rhizobia in nature, they may suffer an early disadvantage relative to other plants, whether conspecifics lacking rhizobia or heterospecifics.


Subject(s)
Bradyrhizobium , Chamaecrista/microbiology , Biomass , Bradyrhizobium/physiology , Chamaecrista/growth & development , Chamaecrista/physiology , Dehydration , Plant Leaves/growth & development , Plant Stems/growth & development
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