Life on The Edge: Adaptation Versus Environmentally Mediated Gene Flow in The Snow Buttercup,Ranunculus Adoneus
- 1 August 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The American Naturalist
- Vol. 150 (2), 143-178
- https://doi.org/10.1086/286061
Abstract
We used experimental transplant studies to understand how dispersal and habitatspecific selection interact to influence plant populations occupying heterogeneous environments. The snow buttercup (Ranunculus adoneus) occupies a steep ecological and flowering time gradient caused by persistent snowmelt differences within its snow bed habitat. We transplanted seeds, seedlings, and adults to learn about the potential interactions between dispersal and selection. We found that adaptive differentiation is not occurring along the snowmelt gradient, despite striking differences in microhabitat conditions and reproductive phenology between early‐ and latemelting sites. Instead, our results imply that environmentally based differences in seed quality are contributing to directional gene flow from early‐melting locations toward latemelting locations. Emergence and early survival of seedlings is greater in late‐melting sites in some years, but the larger seeds produced by maternal plants in early‐melting locations consistently have a fitness advantage in all parts of the snow bed. Larger seeds survive longer in the soil and have a second peak of seedling emergence in their third year, but these late‐emerging seedlings are successful only if dispersed to less vegetated, late‐melting destinations. The longer growing season in earlymelting sites enhances vegetative growth at all life‐history stages and increases fecundity of seedling transplants but also limits the opportunity for establishment from seed. Our demographic analysis suggests that maternal environmental effects on propagule quality can lead to directional gene flow from benign to marginal sites in populations occupying heterogeneous habitats.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Demography of source?sink populations and the evolution of ecological nichesEvolutionary Ecology, 1995
- Evidence for Local Adaptation in Closely Adjacent Subpopulations of Northern Red Oak (Quercus rubra L.) Expressed as Resistance to Leaf HerbivoresThe American Naturalist, 1993
- The Effect of Distance from the Parental Site on Offspring Performance and Inbreeding Depression in Impatiens capensis: A Test of the Local Adaptation HypothesisEvolution, 1990
- Pattern of Phenotypic Viability and Fecundity Selection in a Natural Population of Impatiens pallidaEvolution, 1987
- Some Problems in Estimating the Intensity of Selection Through Fertility Differences in Natural and Experimental PopulationsEvolution, 1986
- Natural Selection of Allozyme Polymorphisms: A Microsite Test Revealing Ecological Genetic Differentiation in Wild BarleyEvolution, 1986
- Pathogen mortality of tropical tree seedlings: experimental studies of the effects of dispersal distance, seedling density, and light conditionsOecologia, 1984
- Intra-Population Differentiation in Annual Plants I. Veronica peregrina L. Raised Under Non-Competitive ConditionsEvolution, 1974
- Evolution in closely adjacent plant populations VIII. Clinal patterns at a mine boundaryHeredity, 1970
- Optimizing reproduction in a randomly varying environmentJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1966