Division of Labor Brings Greater Benefits to Clones of Carpobrotus edulis in the Non-native Range: Evidence for Rapid Adaptive Evolution
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Frontiers Media
Abstract
Why some species become invasive while others do not is a central research request in
biological invasions. Clonality has been suggested as an attribute that could contribute
to plant invasiveness. Division of labor is an important advantage of clonal growth,
and it seems reasonable to anticipate that clonal plants may intensify this clonal
attribute in an invaded range because of positive selection on beneficial traits. To test
this hypothesis, we collected clones of Carpobrotus edulis from native and invasive
populations, grew pairs of connected and severed ramets in a common garden and
under negative spatial covariance of nutrients and light to induce division of labor,
and measured biomass allocation ratios, final biomass, and photochemical efficiency.
Our results showed that both clones from the native and invaded range develop a
division of labor at morphological and physiological level. However, the benefit from
the division of labor was significantly higher in apical ramets from the invaded range
than in ramets from the native area. This is a novel and outstanding result because it
provides the first evidence that the benefit of a key clonal trait such as division of labor
may have been subjected to evolutionary adaptation in the invaded range. The division
of labor can therefore be considered an important trait in the invasiveness of C. edulis.
An appropriate assessment of the influence of clonal traits in plant invasions seems
key for understanding the underlying mechanisms behind biological invasions of new
environments.
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Bibliographic citation
Roiloa, S. R., Retuerto, R., Campoy, J. G., Novoa, A., & Barreiro, R. (2016). Division of labor brings greater benefits to clones of Carpobrotus edulis in the non-native range: evidence for rapid adaptive evolution. Frontiers in plant science, 7, 349.
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https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2016.00349Sponsors
Financial support for this study was provided by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (projects Ref. CGL2013-44519-R, awarded to SRR and Ref. CGL2013-48885-C2-2-R, awarded to RR). European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) co-financed these projects. This is a contribution from the Alien Species Network (Ref. R2014/036 – Xunta de Galicia, Autonomous Government of Galicia)
Rights
Copyright © 2016 Roiloa, Retuerto, Campoy, Novoa and Barreiro. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms








