Effect of water availability on the phenotypic expression of herbivore resistance in northern red oak seedlings (Quercus rubra L.)

Autor: Stowe, Kirk A., Sork, Victoria L., Farrell, Andrew W.
Zdroj: Oecologia; December 1994, Vol. 100 Issue: 3 p309-315, 7p
Abstrakt: The phenotypic expression of quantitative characters is a function of the individual's genotype and the environment in which it is measured. In a previous reciprocal transplant study, we found that patterns of genetic differences in resistance to herbivores among adjacent subpopulations of northern red oak (Quercus rubra L.), were consistent with a local adaptation hypothesis. The goal of this study was to determine if variation in water availability may have been a mechanism responsible for these previously observed patterns. In 1989 a common garden study was initiated using acorns from maternal trees occupying either a north- or south-facing slope microhabitat in an oak-hickory forest in east central Missouri, USA. The seedlings were grown under one of two water treatments, irrigated or natural. In 1992, we utilized this experiment to examine the quantitative character of the percentage of leaf area damaged by herbivores, which is a measure of the phenotypically expressed level of resistance. Specifically, we made three predictions: (1) because northern red oak seem to grow best in mesic environments, seedlings receiving more water should show greater resistance to herbivores; (2) if the subpopulations from north- and south-facing slope microhabitats are genetically differentiated with respect to the quantitative character of resistance to herbivores, then there will be a significant effect of maternal slope microhabitat on the percentage of leaf area damaged; and (3) if the pattern of resistance to herbivores found among subpopulations reflects local adaptation to moisture levels in their own microhabitat, then we would expect to find a significant maternal slope microhabitat by water treatment interaction, with north-facing slope seedlings incurring less damage in the wetter (irrigated) treatment and south-facing slope seedlings incurring less damage in the drier (natural) treatment. Our data supported the first two predictions: seedlings in the irrigated treatment showed a significantly lower percentage of leaf area damage than those in the natural treatment, and the percentage of leaf area damaged was significantly lower on seedlings from maternal plants occupying the north-facing slope microhabitat. However, we found no significant interaction between maternal slope microhabitat and water treatment. These findings demonstrate that northern red oak supbopulations respond phenotypically to water availability, but this factor does not appear to be the underlying mechanism behind the previously observed local adaptation expressed as resistance to herbivores.
Databáze: Supplemental Index