Mountain birch under multiple stressors - heavy metal-resistant populations co-resistant to biotic stress but maladapted to abiotic stress




Eranen JK, Nilsen J, Zverev VE, Kozlov MV

PublisherWILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC

2009

Journal of Evolutionary Biology

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY

J EVOLUTION BIOL

22

4

840

851

12

1010-061X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/j.1420-9101.2009.01684.x



Stress adaptations often include a trade-off of weakened performance in nonlocal conditions, resulting in divergent selection, and potentially, genetic differentiation and evolutionary adaptation. Results of a two-phase (greenhouse and field) common garden experiment demonstrated adaptation of mountain birch (Betula pubescens subsp. czerepanovii) populations from industrially polluted areas of the Kola Peninsula, north-western Russia, to heavy metals (HM), whereas no adaptations to wind or drought stress were detected in populations from wind-exposed sites. HM-adapted seedlings were maladapted to drought but less palatable (co-resistant) to insect herbivores, even under background HM concentrations. The absence of adaptations to harsh microclimate and the generally high adaptive potential of mountain birch, a critical forest forming tree in subarctic Europe, need to be accounted for in models predicting consequences of human-driven environmental changes, including the projected climate change.




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