Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Description
In plants, phenotypic plasticity, the ability to morphologically adapt to new or broad environmental conditions, is a consequence of long-term evolutionary genetic processes. Thus, plants adapted to low phosphate (P) environments exhibit only limited plasticity to take advantage of nutrient enrichment, a global phenomenon in terrestrial and aquatic environments. In the face of anthropogenic P-enrichment, low nutrient adapted resident plant species are frequently displaced by species with high morphological and genetic plasticity. However, it remains unclear whether plasticity is systemically expressed across molecular, biochemical, physiological, and morphological processes that ultimately contribute to the root and shoot phenotypes of plants. In this study, we demonstrated high plasticity in root-borne traits of sawgrass (Cladium jamaicense), the dominant plant species of the P-impoverished Everglades, and counter the idea of inflexibility in low P adapted species. However, sawgras s expressed inflexibility in processes contributing to shoot phenotypes, in contrast to cattail, which was highly plastic in shoot characteristics vii in response to P enrichment. In fact, plasticity in cattail shoots is likely a function of its growth response to P that was globally regulated by P-availability at the level of transcription. Plasticity and inflexibility in the growth of both species also diverged in their allocation of P to the chloroplast for growth in cattail versus the vacuole for P storage in sawgrass. In the Everglades, anthropogenic P-enrichment has changed the environment from a P-limited condition, where plasticity in root-borne traits of sawgrass was advantageous, to one of light-competition, where plasticity in shoot-borne traits drives competitive dominance by cattail.
Extent
x, 102, [viii] p. : ill. (some col.)
Extension
FAU
FAU
admin_unit="FAU01", ingest_id="ing8977", creator="creator:NBURWICK", creation_date="2011-03-07 16:07:43", modified_by="super:SPATEL", modification_date="2012-01-23 12:11:10"
Person Preferred Name
Webb, James.
Graduate College
Physical Description
electronic
x, 102, [viii] p. : ill. (some col.)
Title Plain
Phosphate-associated phenotype plasticity as a driver of cattail invasion in the sawgass-dominated Everglades
Use and Reproduction
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Title
Phosphate-associated phenotype plasticity as a driver of cattail invasion in the sawgass-dominated Everglades
Other Title Info
Phosphate-associated phenotype plasticity as a driver of cattail invasion in the sawgass-dominated Everglades