Some Like It Hot: Maternal-Switching With Climate Change Modifies Formation of Invasive Spartina Hybrids
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Abstract
Climate change can induce temporary, spatial or behavioral changes in species, so that
only some species can adapt to the new climatic conditions. In the case of invasive
species, it is expected that they will be promoted in a context of global change, given
their high tolerance to environmental factors and phenotypic plasticity. Once in the
invaded range, these species can hybridize with native species thus introducing their
genotype in the native biota. However, the effects that climate change will have on
this process of invasion by hybridization remain unclear. We evaluated the historical
establishment of the reciprocal hybrids between the native Spartina maritima and the
invasive S. densiflora in the Gulf of Cadiz (SW Iberian Peninsula) and we related it to
climatic changes during the period 1955–2017. Our results showed that, according
to their dating based on their rate of lateral expansion rates, the establishment of
S. maritima x densiflora and S. densiflora x maritima in the Gulf of Cadiz has occurred
in the last two centuries and has been related to changes in air temperature and
rainfall during the flowering periods of their parental species, with antagonist impacts on
both hybrids. Thus, the hybrid S. densiflora x maritima has been established in years
with mild ends of spring and beginning of summer when the flowering of S. maritima
lengthened and its pollen production was higher, and it coincided with the beginning
of the flowering period of S. densiflora. Moreover, the establishment of this hybrid was
related to higher spring/summer rainfalls, probably due to the reduction in salinity in
middle marshes. However, the hybrid S. maritima x densiflora, was established mainly
in warmer spring/summers in which the proportion of pollen:ovule of S. maritima was
reduced favoring its pollination by S. densiflora. As a consequence of the promotion
of S. maritima x densiflora with climate change, the native and endangered species
S. maritima would be threatened, as both taxa share the same habitat and the hybrid
shows a remarkably higher competitive potential.
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Bibliographic citation
Gallego Tévar, B., Infante Izquierdo, M. D., Figueroa Clemente, E., Jiménez Nieva, F., Muñoz Rodríguez, A. F., Grewell, B. J., Castillo Segura, J. M. (2019). Some Like It Hot: Maternal-Switching With Climate Change Modifies Formation of Invasive Spartina Hybrids. Frontiers in Plant Science, 10. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2019.00484













