How do plants respond and adapt to climate change ? Study at cold margins (sub-Antarctic)

The adaptive potential of a species can be defined as its capacity to cope with environmental change. Adaptive potential increases with phenotypic variation, from the intra-individual to the inter-population level, but factors controlling and explaining this variation still remain poorly understood....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Labarrere, Bastien
Other Authors: Rennes 1, Hennion, Françoise, Prinzing, Andreas
Format: Thesis
Language:French
Published: 2017
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:http://www.theses.fr/2017REN1B002/document
id fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:10670/1.zahfca
record_format openpolar
spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:10670/1.zahfca 2023-05-15T14:02:56+02:00 How do plants respond and adapt to climate change ? Study at cold margins (sub-Antarctic) Comment les plantes répondent et s'adaptent aux changements climatiques : étude aux marges froides (subantarctique) Labarrere, Bastien Rennes 1 Hennion, Françoise Prinzing, Andreas 2017-01-16 http://www.theses.fr/2017REN1B002/document fr fre 10670/1.zahfca http://www.theses.fr/2017REN1B002/document Theses.fr Variation phénotypique Intégration phénotypique Plasticité Espèces végétales Performance Métabolites secondaires Redondance Versatilité Changement climatique Iles Kerguelen Trait variation Phenotypic integration Plasticity Plant species Secondary metabolites Redundancy Versatility Climate change envir geo Thesis https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_46ec/ 2017 fttriple 2023-01-22T17:43:43Z The adaptive potential of a species can be defined as its capacity to cope with environmental change. Adaptive potential increases with phenotypic variation, from the intra-individual to the inter-population level, but factors controlling and explaining this variation still remain poorly understood.We studied four plant species from Iles Kerguelen in the sub-Antarctic region which is currently facing one of the strongest climate changes worldwide. Plant species from Iles Kerguelen are known to show high phenotypic integration (i.e. strong correlation among traits), a phenomenon that has been suggested to constrain trait variation. For these species we studied what constrains phenotypic variation, considering the external environment, the internal phenotypic integration and the associated performance costs. We found that intra-individual variation, i.e. plasticity, may be constrained by complex environmental change and the performance costs it triggers. In contrast, plasticity may be favored by high degree of phenotypic integration (Chapter 3). We found that inter-individual variation within populations may not be constrained by environmental factors, but may be favored by high phenotypic integration (Chapter 1). We found inter-population variation within regions may be constrained by restricted environmental variation (Chapter 1). Finally, we studied secondary metabolites (amines and flavonols) that connect environmental variation to phenotypic variation. We found that compositions and functions of these metabolites vary among regions, probably reflecting evolutionary differentiation among regions (Chapter 2). Patterns of variation betweenregions suggest that within species metabolites may be functionally redundant or versatile, for which to our knowledge our results are the first hint. Overall, we suggest that climate change in Kerguelen will impact plant species performance, and that the persistence of suitable wet habitats will be determinant in species capacities to cope with such changes. Furthermore, this ... Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Unknown Antarctic Kerguelen
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language French
topic Variation phénotypique
Intégration phénotypique
Plasticité
Espèces végétales
Performance
Métabolites secondaires
Redondance
Versatilité
Changement climatique
Iles Kerguelen
Trait variation
Phenotypic integration
Plasticity
Plant species
Secondary metabolites
Redundancy
Versatility
Climate change
envir
geo
spellingShingle Variation phénotypique
Intégration phénotypique
Plasticité
Espèces végétales
Performance
Métabolites secondaires
Redondance
Versatilité
Changement climatique
Iles Kerguelen
Trait variation
Phenotypic integration
Plasticity
Plant species
Secondary metabolites
Redundancy
Versatility
Climate change
envir
geo
Labarrere, Bastien
How do plants respond and adapt to climate change ? Study at cold margins (sub-Antarctic)
topic_facet Variation phénotypique
Intégration phénotypique
Plasticité
Espèces végétales
Performance
Métabolites secondaires
Redondance
Versatilité
Changement climatique
Iles Kerguelen
Trait variation
Phenotypic integration
Plasticity
Plant species
Secondary metabolites
Redundancy
Versatility
Climate change
envir
geo
description The adaptive potential of a species can be defined as its capacity to cope with environmental change. Adaptive potential increases with phenotypic variation, from the intra-individual to the inter-population level, but factors controlling and explaining this variation still remain poorly understood.We studied four plant species from Iles Kerguelen in the sub-Antarctic region which is currently facing one of the strongest climate changes worldwide. Plant species from Iles Kerguelen are known to show high phenotypic integration (i.e. strong correlation among traits), a phenomenon that has been suggested to constrain trait variation. For these species we studied what constrains phenotypic variation, considering the external environment, the internal phenotypic integration and the associated performance costs. We found that intra-individual variation, i.e. plasticity, may be constrained by complex environmental change and the performance costs it triggers. In contrast, plasticity may be favored by high degree of phenotypic integration (Chapter 3). We found that inter-individual variation within populations may not be constrained by environmental factors, but may be favored by high phenotypic integration (Chapter 1). We found inter-population variation within regions may be constrained by restricted environmental variation (Chapter 1). Finally, we studied secondary metabolites (amines and flavonols) that connect environmental variation to phenotypic variation. We found that compositions and functions of these metabolites vary among regions, probably reflecting evolutionary differentiation among regions (Chapter 2). Patterns of variation betweenregions suggest that within species metabolites may be functionally redundant or versatile, for which to our knowledge our results are the first hint. Overall, we suggest that climate change in Kerguelen will impact plant species performance, and that the persistence of suitable wet habitats will be determinant in species capacities to cope with such changes. Furthermore, this ...
author2 Rennes 1
Hennion, Françoise
Prinzing, Andreas
format Thesis
author Labarrere, Bastien
author_facet Labarrere, Bastien
author_sort Labarrere, Bastien
title How do plants respond and adapt to climate change ? Study at cold margins (sub-Antarctic)
title_short How do plants respond and adapt to climate change ? Study at cold margins (sub-Antarctic)
title_full How do plants respond and adapt to climate change ? Study at cold margins (sub-Antarctic)
title_fullStr How do plants respond and adapt to climate change ? Study at cold margins (sub-Antarctic)
title_full_unstemmed How do plants respond and adapt to climate change ? Study at cold margins (sub-Antarctic)
title_sort how do plants respond and adapt to climate change ? study at cold margins (sub-antarctic)
publishDate 2017
url http://www.theses.fr/2017REN1B002/document
geographic Antarctic
Kerguelen
geographic_facet Antarctic
Kerguelen
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_source Theses.fr
op_relation 10670/1.zahfca
http://www.theses.fr/2017REN1B002/document
_version_ 1766273396550664192