Causes and Consequences of Widespread Genotypic Uniformity in the Invasive Aquatic Plant Butomus umbellatus

Over the last century, the aquatic plant Butomus umbellatus has escaped its native Eurasian range and invaded along the Canadian-US border. There appear to be two diploid genotypes invading North America and previous genetic analyses have found almost no genotypic variation within or among introduce...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dean-Moore, Chloe
Other Authors: Biology, Eckert, Christopher
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1974/33511
_version_ 1830587287320133632
author Dean-Moore, Chloe
author2 Biology
Eckert, Christopher
author_facet Dean-Moore, Chloe
author_sort Dean-Moore, Chloe
collection Queen's University, Ontario: QSpace
description Over the last century, the aquatic plant Butomus umbellatus has escaped its native Eurasian range and invaded along the Canadian-US border. There appear to be two diploid genotypes invading North America and previous genetic analyses have found almost no genotypic variation within or among introduced populations. In these populations, plants produce both asexual clonal bulbils and numerous viable seed, however, there is no evidence that seed successfully establishes. First, I test the hypothesis that populations are genetically uniform, then I investigate the following two potential factors limiting sexual reproduction in the invasive range, (1) that a climatic mismatch between the native and introduced ranges is preventing seedling germination and (2) that widespread clonal reproduction renders sexual progeny highly inbred thereby inhibiting recruitment via inbreeding depression. I conducted self-fertilizations, within and between distinct genotype crosses, but none of the recombinant progeny differed in the proportion of viable seed produced, total dry mass or bulbil production. These results are consistent with the previous genetic data which suggests that populations are genetically uniform and that the two distinct genotypes are closely related. I germinated seed under 4 temperatures (20º, 25º, 30º, 35ºC) and analyzed climate data from the genotypes’ introduced and native ranges. Germination was highest at 30ºC and this matched temperatures from the native range, but was much warmer than what B. umbellatus experiences in North America. This suggests that a climatic mismatch between the native and introduced range could be limiting sexual reproduction among introduced diploid populations. Finally, I compared the performance between 15 clonal lineages and 30 recombinant lineages derived from within-genotype crosses under two water depths. All aspects of growth were greater in shallow than deep water and clonal plants outperformed recombinant progeny. It’s also possible that bigger and faster growing bulbils ...
format Thesis
genre Butomus umbellatus
genre_facet Butomus umbellatus
id ftqueensuniv:oai:https://qspace.library.queensu.ca:1974/33511
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftqueensuniv
op_relation Canadian theses
https://hdl.handle.net/1974/33511
op_rights Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/
publishDate 2024
record_format openpolar
spelling ftqueensuniv:oai:https://qspace.library.queensu.ca:1974/33511 2025-04-27T14:27:05+00:00 Causes and Consequences of Widespread Genotypic Uniformity in the Invasive Aquatic Plant Butomus umbellatus Dean-Moore, Chloe Biology Eckert, Christopher 2024-10-02T14:35:02Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1974/33511 eng eng Canadian theses https://hdl.handle.net/1974/33511 Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/ Butomus umbellatus Clonal reproduction Invasive plant Ecology Flowering rush Bulbil Common garden Germination thesis 2024 ftqueensuniv 2025-04-01T00:00:30Z Over the last century, the aquatic plant Butomus umbellatus has escaped its native Eurasian range and invaded along the Canadian-US border. There appear to be two diploid genotypes invading North America and previous genetic analyses have found almost no genotypic variation within or among introduced populations. In these populations, plants produce both asexual clonal bulbils and numerous viable seed, however, there is no evidence that seed successfully establishes. First, I test the hypothesis that populations are genetically uniform, then I investigate the following two potential factors limiting sexual reproduction in the invasive range, (1) that a climatic mismatch between the native and introduced ranges is preventing seedling germination and (2) that widespread clonal reproduction renders sexual progeny highly inbred thereby inhibiting recruitment via inbreeding depression. I conducted self-fertilizations, within and between distinct genotype crosses, but none of the recombinant progeny differed in the proportion of viable seed produced, total dry mass or bulbil production. These results are consistent with the previous genetic data which suggests that populations are genetically uniform and that the two distinct genotypes are closely related. I germinated seed under 4 temperatures (20º, 25º, 30º, 35ºC) and analyzed climate data from the genotypes’ introduced and native ranges. Germination was highest at 30ºC and this matched temperatures from the native range, but was much warmer than what B. umbellatus experiences in North America. This suggests that a climatic mismatch between the native and introduced range could be limiting sexual reproduction among introduced diploid populations. Finally, I compared the performance between 15 clonal lineages and 30 recombinant lineages derived from within-genotype crosses under two water depths. All aspects of growth were greater in shallow than deep water and clonal plants outperformed recombinant progeny. It’s also possible that bigger and faster growing bulbils ... Thesis Butomus umbellatus Queen's University, Ontario: QSpace
spellingShingle Butomus umbellatus
Clonal reproduction
Invasive plant
Ecology
Flowering rush
Bulbil
Common garden
Germination
Dean-Moore, Chloe
Causes and Consequences of Widespread Genotypic Uniformity in the Invasive Aquatic Plant Butomus umbellatus
title Causes and Consequences of Widespread Genotypic Uniformity in the Invasive Aquatic Plant Butomus umbellatus
title_full Causes and Consequences of Widespread Genotypic Uniformity in the Invasive Aquatic Plant Butomus umbellatus
title_fullStr Causes and Consequences of Widespread Genotypic Uniformity in the Invasive Aquatic Plant Butomus umbellatus
title_full_unstemmed Causes and Consequences of Widespread Genotypic Uniformity in the Invasive Aquatic Plant Butomus umbellatus
title_short Causes and Consequences of Widespread Genotypic Uniformity in the Invasive Aquatic Plant Butomus umbellatus
title_sort causes and consequences of widespread genotypic uniformity in the invasive aquatic plant butomus umbellatus
topic Butomus umbellatus
Clonal reproduction
Invasive plant
Ecology
Flowering rush
Bulbil
Common garden
Germination
topic_facet Butomus umbellatus
Clonal reproduction
Invasive plant
Ecology
Flowering rush
Bulbil
Common garden
Germination
url https://hdl.handle.net/1974/33511