Adaptation of Poa alpina to altitude and land use in the Swiss Alps

Current land use and climate change are prompting questions about the ability of plants to adapt to such environmental change. Therefore, we experimentally addressed plant performance and quantitative-genetic diversity of the common Alpine Meadow Grass Poa alpina. We asked how land use and altitude...

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Published in:Alpine Botany
Main Authors: Fischer, Markus, Weyand, Anne, Rudmann-Maurer, Katrin, Stöcklin, Jürg
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: SP Birkhäuser Verlag Basel 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://boris.unibe.ch/10132/1/2011_AlpBotany_121_91.pdf
https://boris.unibe.ch/10132/
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spelling ftunivbern:oai:boris.unibe.ch:10132 2023-08-20T03:59:29+02:00 Adaptation of Poa alpina to altitude and land use in the Swiss Alps Fischer, Markus Weyand, Anne Rudmann-Maurer, Katrin Stöcklin, Jürg 2011 application/pdf https://boris.unibe.ch/10132/1/2011_AlpBotany_121_91.pdf https://boris.unibe.ch/10132/ eng eng SP Birkhäuser Verlag Basel https://boris.unibe.ch/10132/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Fischer, Markus; Weyand, Anne; Rudmann-Maurer, Katrin; Stöcklin, Jürg (2011). Adaptation of Poa alpina to altitude and land use in the Swiss Alps. Alpine Botany, 121(2), pp. 91-105. Basel: SP Birkhäuser Verlag Basel 10.1007/s00035-011-0096-2 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00035-011-0096-2> 580 Plants (Botany) info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion PeerReviewed 2011 ftunivbern https://doi.org/10.1007/s00035-011-0096-2 2023-07-31T20:33:35Z Current land use and climate change are prompting questions about the ability of plants to adapt to such environmental change. Therefore, we experimentally addressed plant performance and quantitative-genetic diversity of the common Alpine Meadow Grass Poa alpina. We asked how land use and altitude affect the occurrence of P. alpina in the field and whether its common-garden performance suggests adaptation to conditions at plant origin and differences in quantitative genetic diversity among plant origins. Among 216 candidate grassland sites of different land use and altitude from 12 villages in the Swiss Alps, P. alpina occurred preferentially in fertilized and grazed sites and at higher elevations. In a common garden at 1,500 m asl, we grew two plants of >600 genotypes representing 78 grassland sites. After 2 years, nearly 90% of all plants had reproduced. In agreement with adaptive advantages of vegetative reproduction at higher altitudes, only 23% of reproductive plants from lower altitudes reproduced via vegetative bulbils, but 55% of plants from higher altitudes. In agreement with adaptive advantages of reproduction in grazed sites, allocation to reproductive biomass was higher in plants from grazed grasslands than from mown ones. For 53 grasslands, we also investigated broad-sense heritability H2, which was significant for all studied traits and twice as high for grazed as for mown grasslands. Moreover, possibly associated with their higher landscape diversity, H2 was higher for sites of villages of Romanic cultural tradition than for those of Germanic and Walser traditions. We suggest promoting diverse land use regimes to conserve not only landscape and plant species diversity, but also adaptive genetic differentiation and heritable genetic variation. Article in Journal/Newspaper Alpine meadow-grass Poa alpina BORIS (Bern Open Repository and Information System, University of Bern) Alpine Botany 121 2 91 105
institution Open Polar
collection BORIS (Bern Open Repository and Information System, University of Bern)
op_collection_id ftunivbern
language English
topic 580 Plants (Botany)
spellingShingle 580 Plants (Botany)
Fischer, Markus
Weyand, Anne
Rudmann-Maurer, Katrin
Stöcklin, Jürg
Adaptation of Poa alpina to altitude and land use in the Swiss Alps
topic_facet 580 Plants (Botany)
description Current land use and climate change are prompting questions about the ability of plants to adapt to such environmental change. Therefore, we experimentally addressed plant performance and quantitative-genetic diversity of the common Alpine Meadow Grass Poa alpina. We asked how land use and altitude affect the occurrence of P. alpina in the field and whether its common-garden performance suggests adaptation to conditions at plant origin and differences in quantitative genetic diversity among plant origins. Among 216 candidate grassland sites of different land use and altitude from 12 villages in the Swiss Alps, P. alpina occurred preferentially in fertilized and grazed sites and at higher elevations. In a common garden at 1,500 m asl, we grew two plants of >600 genotypes representing 78 grassland sites. After 2 years, nearly 90% of all plants had reproduced. In agreement with adaptive advantages of vegetative reproduction at higher altitudes, only 23% of reproductive plants from lower altitudes reproduced via vegetative bulbils, but 55% of plants from higher altitudes. In agreement with adaptive advantages of reproduction in grazed sites, allocation to reproductive biomass was higher in plants from grazed grasslands than from mown ones. For 53 grasslands, we also investigated broad-sense heritability H2, which was significant for all studied traits and twice as high for grazed as for mown grasslands. Moreover, possibly associated with their higher landscape diversity, H2 was higher for sites of villages of Romanic cultural tradition than for those of Germanic and Walser traditions. We suggest promoting diverse land use regimes to conserve not only landscape and plant species diversity, but also adaptive genetic differentiation and heritable genetic variation.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Fischer, Markus
Weyand, Anne
Rudmann-Maurer, Katrin
Stöcklin, Jürg
author_facet Fischer, Markus
Weyand, Anne
Rudmann-Maurer, Katrin
Stöcklin, Jürg
author_sort Fischer, Markus
title Adaptation of Poa alpina to altitude and land use in the Swiss Alps
title_short Adaptation of Poa alpina to altitude and land use in the Swiss Alps
title_full Adaptation of Poa alpina to altitude and land use in the Swiss Alps
title_fullStr Adaptation of Poa alpina to altitude and land use in the Swiss Alps
title_full_unstemmed Adaptation of Poa alpina to altitude and land use in the Swiss Alps
title_sort adaptation of poa alpina to altitude and land use in the swiss alps
publisher SP Birkhäuser Verlag Basel
publishDate 2011
url https://boris.unibe.ch/10132/1/2011_AlpBotany_121_91.pdf
https://boris.unibe.ch/10132/
genre Alpine meadow-grass
Poa alpina
genre_facet Alpine meadow-grass
Poa alpina
op_source Fischer, Markus; Weyand, Anne; Rudmann-Maurer, Katrin; Stöcklin, Jürg (2011). Adaptation of Poa alpina to altitude and land use in the Swiss Alps. Alpine Botany, 121(2), pp. 91-105. Basel: SP Birkhäuser Verlag Basel 10.1007/s00035-011-0096-2 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00035-011-0096-2>
op_relation https://boris.unibe.ch/10132/
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1007/s00035-011-0096-2
container_title Alpine Botany
container_volume 121
container_issue 2
container_start_page 91
op_container_end_page 105
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