journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38433501/plant-soil-microbe-feedbacks-depend-on-distance-and-ploidy-in-a-mixed-cytotype-population-of-larrea-tridentata
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Benjamin P Gerstner, Robert G Laport, Jennifer A Rudgers, Kenneth D Whitney
PREMISE: Theory predicts that mixed ploidy populations should be short-lived due to strong fitness disadvantages for the rare ploidy. However, mixed ploidy populations are common, suggesting that the fitness costs for rare ploidies are counterbalanced by ecological benefits that emerge when rare. We investigated whether differences in ecological interactions with soil microbes help to maintain a tetraploid-hexaploid population of Larrea tridentata (creosote bush) in the Sonoran Desert, California, United States, where prior work documented ploidy-specific root-associated microbes...
March 3, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38419145/anatomy-of-a-mega-radiation-biogeography-and-niche-evolution-in-astragalus
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ryan A Folk, Joseph L M Charboneau, Michael Belitz, Tajinder Singh, Heather R Kates, Douglas E Soltis, Pamela S Soltis, Robert P Guralnick, Carolina M Siniscalchi
PREMISE: Astragalus (Fabaceae), with more than 3000 species, represents a globally successful radiation of morphologically highly similar species predominant across the northern hemisphere. It has attracted attention from systematists and biogeographers, who have asked what factors might be behind the extraordinary diversity of this important arid-adapted clade and what sets it apart from close relatives with far less species richness. METHODS: Here, for the first time using extensive phylogenetic sampling, we asked whether (1) Astragalus is uniquely characterized by bursts of radiation or whether diversification instead is uniform and no different from closely related taxa...
February 28, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38403896/the-contribution-of-carbon-budget-to-masting-intervals-in-veratrum-album-populations-inhabiting-different-elevations
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yohei Ito, Gaku Kudo
PREMISE: Mast flowering/seeding is often more extreme in lower-resource environments, such as alpine compared to lowland habitats. We studied a masting herb that had less extreme masting at higher elevations, and tested if this difference could be explained by higher photosynthetic productivity and/or lower reproductive investment at the higher-elevation sites. METHODS: We examined the relationship between flowering intervals and carbon budget (i.e., the balance between reproductive investment and annual carbon fixation) in a masting herb, Veratrum album subsp...
February 25, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38384109/is-experimental-evolution-relevant-for-botanical-research
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Florian P Schiestl
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
February 21, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38384001/ontogenetic-changes-in-ecophysiology-are-an-understudied-yet-important-component-of-plant-adaptation
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erica H Lawrence-Paul, Jesse R Lasky
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
February 21, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38380953/linkages-among-stem-xylem-transport-biomechanics-and-storage-in-lianas-and-trees-across-three-contrasting-environments
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ke-Yan Zhang, Da Yang, Yun-Bing Zhang, Xun-Ru Ai, Lan Yao, Zhi-Jun Deng, Jiao-Lin Zhang
PREMISE: Stem xylem transports water and nutrients, mechanically supports aboveground tissues, and stores water and nonstructural carbohydrates. These three functions are associated with three types of cells-vessel, fiber, and parenchyma, respectively. METHODS: We measured stem theoretical hydraulic conductivity (Kt ), modulus of elasticity (MOE), tissue water content, starch, soluble sugars, cellulose, and xylem anatomical traits in 15 liana and 16 tree species across three contrasting sites in Southwest China...
February 21, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38380917/correction-to-fruit-and-seed-structure-in-the-ana-grade-angiosperms-ancestral-traits-and-specializations
#27
(no author information available yet)
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
February 21, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38374713/genetic-relatedness-can-alter-the-strength-of-plant-soil-interactions
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kelly M Clark, Marci J Gallagher, Thomas Canam, Scott J Meiners
PREMISE: Intraspecific variation may play a key role in shaping the relationships between plants and their interactions with soil microbial communities. The soil microbes of individual plants can generate intraspecific variation in the responsiveness of the plant offspring, yet have been much less studied. To address this need, we explored how the relatedness of seedlings from established clones of Solidago altissima altered the plant-soil interactions of the seedlings. METHODS: Seedlings of known parentage were generated from a series of 24 clones grown in a common garden...
February 19, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38366863/smut-fungus-langdonia-walkerae-incidence-is-lower-in-two-bunchgrass-species-aristida-stricta-and-a-beyrichiana-after-fires-early-in-the-year
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer M Fill, Inga Meadows, Joan L Walker, Raelene M Crandall, Julia L Kerrigan
PREMISE: In frequently burned southeastern USA pine-grassland communities, wiregrass (Aristida stricta and A. beyrichiana) are dominant bunchgrasses whose flowers are infected during flowering by a smut fungus (Langdonia walkerae). We hypothesized that because prescribed fire timing affects wiregrass flowering patterns, it could affect smut incidence (occurrence of smut on plants) and severity of infection in inflorescences and spikelets. Because soil order could influence plant susceptibility, we hypothesized that these patterns would differ between soil orders...
February 17, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38366744/moss-functional-trait-ecology-trends-gaps-and-biases-in-the-current-literature
#30
REVIEW
Kirsten Coe, Benjamin Carter, Mandy Slate, Daniel Stanton
Functional traits are critical tools in plant ecology for capturing organism-environment interactions based on trade-offs and making links between organismal and ecosystem processes. While broad frameworks for functional traits have been developed for vascular plants, we lack the same for bryophytes, despite an escalation in the number of studies on bryophyte functional trait in the last 45 years and an increased recognition of the ecological roles bryophytes play across ecosystems. In this review, we compiled data from 282 published articles (10,005 records) that focused on functional traits measured in mosses and sought to examine trends in types of traits measured, capture taxonomic and geographic breadth of trait coverage, reveal biases in coverage in the current literature, and develop a bryophyte-function index (BFI) to describe the completeness of current trait coverage and identify global gaps to focus research efforts...
February 17, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38366679/neopolyploidy-has-variable-effects-on-the-diversity-and-composition-of-the-wild-strawberry-microbiome
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas J Anneberg, Nevin P Cullen, Elizabeth M O'Neill, Na Wei, Tia-Lynn Ashman
PREMISE: Whole-genome duplication (neopolyploidy) can instantly differentiate the phenotype of neopolyploids from their diploid progenitors. These phenotypic shifts in organs such as roots and leaves could also differentiate the way neopolyploids interact with microbial species. While some studies have addressed how specific microbial interactions are affected by neopolyploidy, we lack an understanding of how genome duplication affects the diversity and composition of microbial communities...
February 17, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38353923/arabidopsis-response-to-copper-is-mediated-by-density-and-root-exudates-evidence-that-plant-density-and-toxic-soils-can-shape-plant-communities
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Abigail Dingus, Marja I Roslund, Soren Brauner, Aki Sinkkonen, Jeffrey D Weidenhamer
PREMISE: Plants grown at high densities show increased tolerance to heavy metals for reasons that are not clear. A potential explanation is the release of citrate by plant roots, which binds metals and prevents uptake. Thus, pooled exudates at high plant densities might increase tolerance. We tested this exclusion facilitation hypothesis using mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana defective in citrate exudation. METHODS: Wild type Arabidopsis and two allelic mutants for the Ferric Reductase Defective 3 (FRD3) gene were grown at four densities and watered with copper sulfate at four concentrations...
February 14, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38351495/amphistomy-increases-leaf-photosynthesis-more-in-coastal-than-montane-plants-of-hawaiian-ilima-sida-fallax
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Genevieve Triplett, Thomas N Buckley, Christopher D Muir
PREMISE: The adaptive significance of amphistomy (stomata on both upper and lower leaf surfaces) is unresolved. A widespread association between amphistomy and open, sunny habitats suggests the adaptive benefit of amphistomy may be greatest in these contexts, but this hypothesis has not been tested experimentally. Understanding amphistomy informs its potential as a target for crop improvement and paleoenvironment reconstruction. METHODS: We developed a method to quantify "amphistomy advantage" ( <mml:math xmlns:mml="https://www...
February 13, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38334302/embracing-uncertainty-the-way-forward-in-plant-fossil-phylogenetics
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mario Coiro
Although molecular phylogenetics remains the most widely used method of inferring the evolutionary history of living groups, the last decade has seen a renewed interest in morphological phylogenetics, mostly driven by the promises that integrating the fossil record in phylogenetic trees offers to our understanding of macroevolutionary processes and dynamics and the possibility that the inclusion of fossil taxa could lead to more accurate phylogenetic hypotheses. The plant fossil record presents some challenges to its integration in a phylogenetic framework...
February 9, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38334273/morphological-and-genetic-evidence-suggest-gene-flow-among-native-and-naturalized-mint-species
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jill K Olofsson, Torbjörn Tyler, Luke T Dunning, Mats Hjertson, Åke Rühling, Anders J Hansen
PREMISE: Cultivation and naturalization of plants beyond their natural range can bring previously geographically isolated taxa together, increasing the opportunity for hybridization, the outcomes of which are not predictable. Here, we explored the phenotypic and genomic effects of interspecific gene flow following the widespread cultivation of Mentha spicata (spearmint), M. longifolia, and M. suaveolens. METHODS: We morphologically evaluated 155 herbarium specimens of three Mentha species and sequenced the genomes of a subset of 93 specimens...
February 9, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38334065/the-evolution-of-glandularity-as-a-defense-against-herbivores-in-the-tarweed-clade
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ian S Pearse, Eric LoPresti, Bruce G Baldwin, Billy Krimmel
PREMISE: Glandular trichomes are implicated in direct and indirect defense of plants. However, the degree to which glandular and non-glandular trichomes have evolved as a consequence of herbivory remains unclear, because their heritability, their association with herbivore resistance, their trade-offs with one another, and their association with other functions are rarely quantified. METHODS: We conducted a phylogenetic comparison of trichomes and herbivore resistance against the generalist caterpillar, Heliothis virescens, among tarweed species (Asteraceae: Madiinae) and a genetic correlation study comparing those same traits among maternal half-sibs of three tarweed species...
February 9, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38332482/quantifying-various-aspects-of-chemical-diversity-in-hybrid-plants-can-help-understanding-ecological-consequences-of-hybridization
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Martin Volf, Sofian A Renoult, Shristee Panthee, Nicole M van Dam
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
February 8, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303667/genetic-consequences-of-last-glacial-holocene-changes-in-snowfall-regime-in-arnica-mallotopus-populations-a-plant-confined-to-heavy-snow-areas-of-japan
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kazutoshi Masuda, Hiroaki Setoguchi, Koki Nagasawa, Shun K Hirota, Yoshihisa Suyama, Kazuhiro Sawa, Shigeru Fukumoto, Masae I Ishihara, Harue Abe, Hayato Tsuboi, Tsuguoki Tango, Sayoko Mori, Shota Sakaguchi
PREMISE: Snow is an important environmental factor affecting plant distribution. Past changes in snowfall regimes may have controlled the demographies of snow-dependent plants. However, our knowledge of changes in the distribution and demographies of such plants is limited because of the lack of fossil records. METHODS: Population genetic and landscape genetic analyses were used to investigate the response of population dynamics of Arnica mallotopus (Asteraceae)-a plant confined to heavy-snow areas of Japan-to changes in snowfall regimes from the Last Glacial Period to the Holocene...
February 2, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38297448/young-evolutionary-origins-of-dioecy-in-the-genus-asparagus
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Philip C Bentz, Zhengjie Liu, Jun-Bo Yang, Le Zhang, Sandra Burrows, John Burrows, Akira Kanno, Zichao Mao, Jim Leebens-Mack
PREMISE: Dioecy (separate sexes) has independently evolved numerous times across the angiosperm phylogeny and is recently derived in many lineages. However, our understanding is limited regarding the evolutionary mechanisms that drive the origins of dioecy in plants. The recent and repeated evolution of dioecy across angiosperms offers an opportunity to make strong inferences about the ecological, developmental, and molecular factors influencing the evolution of dioecy, and thus sex chromosomes...
January 31, 2024: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38290989/as-prey-and-pollinators-insects-increase-reproduction-and-allow-for-outcrossing-in-the-carnivorous-plant-dionaea-muscipula
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laura E Hamon, Elsa Youngsteadt, Rebecca E Irwin, Clyde E Sorenson
PREMISE: Understanding the factors that limit reproductive success is a key component of plant biology. Carnivorous plants rely on insects as both nutrient sources and pollinators, providing a unique system for studying the effects of both resource and pollen limitation on plant reproduction. METHODS: We conducted a field experiment using wild-growing Dionaea muscipula J. Ellis (Droseraceae) in which we manipulated prey and pollen in a factorial design and measured flower production, number of fruits, and number of seeds...
January 30, 2024: American Journal of Botany
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