2015
DOI: 10.1007/s00035-015-0157-z
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Past selection explains differentiation in flowering phenology of nearby populations of a common alpine plant

Abstract: The timing of and relative investment in reproductive events are crucial fitness determinants for alpine plants, which have limited opportunities for reproduction in the cold and short growing seasons at high elevations. We use the alpine Anthyllis vulneraria to study whether flowering phenology and reproductive allocation have been under diversifying selection, and to assess genetic diversity and plastic responses to drought in these traits. Open-pollinated maternal families from three populations in each of … Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Moreover, AFLP variance in a study of eight taxa of A. vulneraria did not support recognizing intraspecific taxa of A. vulneraria at the species or subspecies level (Köster et al 2008). In contrast to earlier studies which argued that subspecies do not interbreed due to the predominantly autogamous reproductive system (Couderc 1971;Couderc and Gorenflot 1978) more recent studies based on molecular markers found that there is considerable gene flow among and within populations (Honnay et al 2006;Van Glabeke et al 2007;Kesselring et al 2015) indicating that the populations are not predominantly selfing. In the present study, we will therefore not distinguish between putative subspecies a priori to capture a large amount of variation over the whole study area.…”
Section: Study Speciescontrasting
confidence: 69%
“…Moreover, AFLP variance in a study of eight taxa of A. vulneraria did not support recognizing intraspecific taxa of A. vulneraria at the species or subspecies level (Köster et al 2008). In contrast to earlier studies which argued that subspecies do not interbreed due to the predominantly autogamous reproductive system (Couderc 1971;Couderc and Gorenflot 1978) more recent studies based on molecular markers found that there is considerable gene flow among and within populations (Honnay et al 2006;Van Glabeke et al 2007;Kesselring et al 2015) indicating that the populations are not predominantly selfing. In the present study, we will therefore not distinguish between putative subspecies a priori to capture a large amount of variation over the whole study area.…”
Section: Study Speciescontrasting
confidence: 69%
“…Flowering phenology obviously is constrained by the physiological constraints imposed by different seasonal environments. Seasons that are too harsh to survive are obviously too harsh to flower [ 4 ]. Among communities, flowering phenology is driven by functional traits that permit plants to sustain environmental stress and disturbance [ 5 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In an alpine grassland of Switzerland, late reproducing plants could not mature seeds due to the shortening of the growing season by drought (Gugger et al, 2015). Drought treatment substantially reduced the reproductive biomass of alpine populations in the Swiss Alps, with advanced peak and end of flowering (Kesselring, Armbruster, Hamann, & Stöcklin, 2015).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%