Trait variation, trade‐offs, and attributes may contribute to colonization and range expansion of a globally distributed weed

Premise Trait variation, trade‐offs, and attributes can facilitate colonization and range expansion. We explored how those trait features compare between ancestral and nonnative populations of the globally distributed weed Centaurea solstitialis. Methods We measured traits related to survival, size,...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of botany 2021-11, Vol.108 (11), p.2183-2195
Hauptverfasser: Eren, Özkan, Hierro, José L.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Premise Trait variation, trade‐offs, and attributes can facilitate colonization and range expansion. We explored how those trait features compare between ancestral and nonnative populations of the globally distributed weed Centaurea solstitialis. Methods We measured traits related to survival, size, reproduction, and dispersal in field sampling following major environmental gradients; that of elevation in Anatolia (ancestral range) and that of precipitation in Argentina (nonnative range). We also estimated abundance. Results We found that overall variation in traits in ancestral populations was similar to that in nonnative populations. Only one trait—seed mass—displayed greater variation in ancestral than nonnative populations; coincidentally, seed mass has been shown to track global range expansion of C. solstitialis. Traits displayed several associations, among which seed mass and number were positively related in both ranges. Many traits varied with elevation in the ancestral range, whereas none varied with precipitation in the nonnative one. Interestingly, most traits varying with elevation within the ancestral range also displayed differences in attributes between ancestral and nonnative ranges. Unexpectedly, ancestral plants were more fecund than nonnative plants, but density was greater in the nonnative than ancestral range, indicating that C. solstitialis survives at larger proportions in the nonnative than ancestral range. Conclusions Our results suggest that maintaining levels of trait variation in nonnative populations comparable to those in ancestral populations, avoiding trait trade‐offs, and developing differences in trait attributes between ranges can play a major role in the success of many weeds in novel environments.
ISSN:0002-9122
1537-2197
DOI:10.1002/ajb2.1755