“…These include optimizing the exploitation of limiting resources such as light, water or nitrogen (Osada et al ., 2014; Ponce-Bautista et al ., 2017; Mediavilla et al ., 2019), altering the outcome of interactions with animals (Sobral et al ., 2013, 2014; Shimada et al ., 2015; Wetzel et al ., 2016), driving selection on reproductive traits (Austen et al ., 2015; Dai et al ., 2016; Arceo-Gómez et al ., 2017; Kulbaba et al ., 2017), and enhancing tolerance of environmental unpredictability (Tíscar Oliver & Lucas Borja, 2010; Hidalgo et al ., 2016). Because of these ecological effects, subindividual variability can eventually influence the fitness of individuals and become itself a target for natural selection, since plants not only have characteristic trait means but also characteristic trait variances and spatio-temporal patterns of subindividual heterogeneity (Herrera, 2009, 2017; Kulbaba et al ., 2017; Harder et al ., 2019).…”