Data from: Adaptive plasticity and epigenetic variation in response to warming in an Alpine plant
Environmentally induced phenotypic plasticity may be a critical component of response to changing environments. We examined local differentiation and adaptive phenotypic plasticity in response to elevated temperature in half-sib lines collected across an elevation gradient for the alpine herb, Wahle...
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Zusammenfassung: | Environmentally induced phenotypic plasticity may be a critical component
of response to changing environments. We examined local differentiation
and adaptive phenotypic plasticity in response to elevated temperature in
half-sib lines collected across an elevation gradient for the alpine herb,
Wahlenbergia ceracea. Using Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism (AFLP),
we found low but significant genetic differentiation between low- and
high-elevation seedlings, and seedlings originating from low elevations
grew faster and showed stronger temperature responses (more plasticity)
than those from medium and high elevations. Furthermore, plasticity was
more often adaptive for plants of low-elevation origin and maladaptive for
plants of high elevation. With methylation sensitive-AFLP (MS-AFLP), we
revealed an increase in epigenetic variation in response to temperature in
low-elevation seedlings. Although we did not find significant direct
correlations between MS-AFLP loci and phenotypes, our results demonstrate
that adaptive plasticity in temperature response to warming varies over
fine spatial scales and suggest the involvement of epigenetic mechanisms
in this response. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.73r1b |