Publikation: Divergent geographic variation in above‐ versus below‐ground secondary metabolites of Reynoutria japonica
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2024
Autor:innen
Bi, Jingwen
Bossdorf, Oliver
Liao, Zhiyong
Richards, Christina L.
Parepa, Madalin
Berninger, Frank
Zhao, Yujie
Liu, Zekang
Wu, Jihua
et al.
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National Natural Science Foundation of China: 31961133028
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG): 431595342
Institutionen der Bundesrepublik Deutschland: 306055
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG): 431595342
Institutionen der Bundesrepublik Deutschland: 306055
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Journal of Ecology. Wiley. 2024, 112(3), S. 514-527. ISSN 0022-0477. eISSN 1365-2745. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.1111/1365-2745.14248
Zusammenfassung
- Secondary metabolites play an important role in plant adaptation, because they can mitigate biotic and abiotic environmental stresses. However, their production and allocation incur different costs and benefits, and are therefore subject to trade-offs, which are less studied.
- To understand large-scale geographic patterns of secondary metabolites, and their environmental drivers and trade-offs, we studied 39 natural populations of the perennial herb Japanese knotweed (Reynoutria japonica) along a large latitudinal gradient in China. We measured the concentrations of six polyphenols in leaves and rhizomes of R. japonica, and associated the variation in these metabolites with biotic and abiotic environmental factors as well as with functional plant traits and putative costs of secondary metabolites.
- We found that climate was an important driver of variation in secondary metabolites, both above- and below-ground. Remarkably, the patterns of association differed between leaves and rhizomes, as well as between putative low-cost versus high-cost compounds. While annual mean temperature was a stronger predictor of above-ground metabolites, annual precipitation was more frequently associated with variation in below-ground metabolites. Moreover, annual temperature was positively associated with high-cost metabolites, but negatively with low-cost metabolites. Above-ground secondary metabolites were generally more strongly associated with functional traits (e.g. specific leaf area) than below-ground metabolites, and in all cases the directions of correlation were opposite for low-cost versus high-cost metabolites above-ground. The patterns of association also varied with latitude such that leaf concentrations of low-cost metabolites (quercetin) increased but those of high-cost metabolites (resveratrol, piceid and emodin) decreased at higher latitudes. In rhizomes, in contrast, the concentrations of high-cost metabolites (piceid and emodin) increased with latitude.
- Synthesis. Our findings indicate that allocation strategies differ between above- and below-ground tissues of Reynoutria japonica. As latitude increases, R. japonica invests relatively more into below-ground metabolites. We propose that reduced high-cost metabolites in the leaves at higher latitudes may help to conserve nutrients after defoliation, while maintaining high-cost metabolites in rhizomes may be important for persistent allelopathic effects and resource conservation below-ground. The divergent patterns of above- and below-ground metabolite allocation thus likely reflect the multiple functions of metabolites and the plants' adaptation to different environments.
Zusammenfassung in einer weiteren Sprache
Fachgebiet (DDC)
570 Biowissenschaften, Biologie
Schlagwörter
allocation theory, carbon-nutrient balance hypothesis, Japanese knotweed, optimal defence, polyphenols, secondary chemistry, trade-offs
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BI, Jingwen, Oliver BOSSDORF, Zhiyong LIAO, Christina L. RICHARDS, Madalin PAREPA, Weihan ZHAO, Frank BERNINGER, Yujie ZHAO, Zekang LIU, Jihua WU, 2024. Divergent geographic variation in above‐ versus below‐ground secondary metabolites of Reynoutria japonica. In: Journal of Ecology. Wiley. 2024, 112(3), S. 514-527. ISSN 0022-0477. eISSN 1365-2745. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.1111/1365-2745.14248BibTex
@article{Bi2024-03Diver-73433,
title={Divergent geographic variation in above‐ versus below‐ground secondary metabolites of <i>Reynoutria japonica</i>},
year={2024},
doi={10.1111/1365-2745.14248},
number={3},
volume={112},
issn={0022-0477},
journal={Journal of Ecology},
pages={514--527},
author={Bi, Jingwen and Bossdorf, Oliver and Liao, Zhiyong and Richards, Christina L. and Parepa, Madalin and Zhao, Weihan and Berninger, Frank and Zhao, Yujie and Liu, Zekang and Wu, Jihua}
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<dcterms:abstract>1. Secondary metabolites play an important role in plant adaptation, because they can mitigate biotic and abiotic environmental stresses. However, their production and allocation incur different costs and benefits, and are therefore subject to trade-offs, which are less studied.
2. To understand large-scale geographic patterns of secondary metabolites, and their environmental drivers and trade-offs, we studied 39 natural populations of the perennial herb Japanese knotweed (Reynoutria japonica) along a large latitudinal gradient in China. We measured the concentrations of six polyphenols in leaves and rhizomes of R. japonica, and associated the variation in these metabolites with biotic and abiotic environmental factors as well as with functional plant traits and putative costs of secondary metabolites.
3. We found that climate was an important driver of variation in secondary metabolites, both above- and below-ground. Remarkably, the patterns of association differed between leaves and rhizomes, as well as between putative low-cost versus high-cost compounds. While annual mean temperature was a stronger predictor of above-ground metabolites, annual precipitation was more frequently associated with variation in below-ground metabolites. Moreover, annual temperature was positively associated with high-cost metabolites, but negatively with low-cost metabolites. Above-ground secondary metabolites were generally more strongly associated with functional traits (e.g. specific leaf area) than below-ground metabolites, and in all cases the directions of correlation were opposite for low-cost versus high-cost metabolites above-ground. The patterns of association also varied with latitude such that leaf concentrations of low-cost metabolites (quercetin) increased but those of high-cost metabolites (resveratrol, piceid and emodin) decreased at higher latitudes. In rhizomes, in contrast, the concentrations of high-cost metabolites (piceid and emodin) increased with latitude.
4. Synthesis. Our findings indicate that allocation strategies differ between above- and below-ground tissues of Reynoutria japonica. As latitude increases, R. japonica invests relatively more into below-ground metabolites. We propose that reduced high-cost metabolites in the leaves at higher latitudes may help to conserve nutrients after defoliation, while maintaining high-cost metabolites in rhizomes may be important for persistent allelopathic effects and resource conservation below-ground. The divergent patterns of above- and below-ground metabolite allocation thus likely reflect the multiple functions of metabolites and the plants' adaptation to different environments.</dcterms:abstract>
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