Local adaptation in a New Zealand invader, Mimulus guttatus

Q3 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
M. Williamson, P. Hulme, David A. Condor, H. Chapman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The New Zealand flora comprises proportionately more alien species than anywhere else on Earth. Many of these species are ‘sleeper’ species, currently not invasive but with the potential to become so. Understanding what traits lead to sleepers becoming invasive is a key question in invasion biology. One hypothesis is local adaptation — that is, selection pressures in an alien habitat select for certain genetic traits favouring species spread. In New Zealand, the semi-aquatic herb Mimulus gutattus, ‘monkey flower’, is already showing signs of becoming invasive and is widespread across the South Island, blocking waterways and ditches. A common garden experiment was used to test for local adaptation in 37 populations of monkey flower from 8 regions across the North and South Islands of New Zealand. Possible adaptations in plant physiology (including, fresh vs dry weight, flower size, and photosynthetic rate) were examined. Observable differences include significant differences in biomass and leaf morphology. Results to date indicate significant genetic differences among New Zealand monkey flower populations. This is indicative of invasive potential.
一种新西兰入侵者的本地适应性
新西兰植物群中外来物种的比例比地球上任何地方都要多。这些物种中有许多是“潜伏”物种,目前还不是入侵物种,但有可能成为入侵物种。了解哪些特征导致睡眠者变得具有侵略性是入侵生物学的一个关键问题。一种假说是局部适应——也就是说,外来栖息地的选择压力选择了某些有利于物种传播的遗传特征。在新西兰,半水生草本植物“猴花”(Mimulus gutattus)已经显示出入侵的迹象,并在南岛广泛分布,堵塞了水道和沟渠。采用普通园林试验方法,对新西兰南北岛8个地区的37个猴花种群进行了本地适应性测试。研究了植物生理上可能的适应性(包括鲜重与干重、花大小和光合速率)。可观察到的差异包括生物量和叶片形态的显著差异。迄今为止的结果表明,新西兰猴花种群之间存在显著的遗传差异。这表明有侵入性的可能。
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来源期刊
New Zealand Plant Protection
New Zealand Plant Protection Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Insect Science
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: New Zealand Plant Protection is the journal of the New Zealand Plant Protection Society. It publishes original research papers on all aspects of biology, ecology and control of weeds, vertebrate and invertebrate pests, and pathogens and beneficial micro-organisms in agriculture, horticulture, forestry and natural ecosystems of relevance to New Zealand.
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