150 resultados para native plants
Resumo:
This article explores possible histories of plant exchanges and plant naming tied to the slave trade between East Africa, Madagascar and the Mascarene Islands. The subsequent 'marronnage' of slaves on these islands - their escape from captivity, sometimes to live in mountain hideouts - continues to inspire cultural references. Inspired by the use of the adjective 'marron/marronne' for a number of plants on Reunion Island, we compile evidence of plant exchanges and plant naming from ecological records, historical accounts and the use of descriptive, emotive or symbolic vernacular names as clues for deepening our knowledge of historical societies and environments. The evidence from the Mascarenes opens a window into the role of the African diaspora in plant introduction, diffusion, domestication and cultivation. We document that maroons relied on a variety of wild, escaped and cultivated plants for their subsistence. We also highlight the role of marronnage in the popular and literary imaginary, with the result that many plants are named 'marron/marrone' in a metaphorical sense. Finally, we identify a few plants that may have been transported, cultivated, or encouraged in one way or another by maroons. Along the way, we reflect on the pitfalls and opportunities of such interdisciplinary work.
Resumo:
The global human population is expected to reach ∼9 billion by 2050. Feeding this many people represents a major challenge requiring global crop yield increases of up to 100%. Microbial symbionts of plants such as arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) represent a huge, but unrealized resource for improving yields of globally important crops, especially in the tropics. We argue that the application of AMF in agriculture is too simplistic and ignores basic ecological principals. To achieve this challenge, a community and population ecology approach can contribute greatly. First, ecologists could significantly improve our understanding of the determinants of the survival of introduced AMF, the role of adaptability and intraspecific diversity of AMF and whether inoculation has a direct or indirect effect on plant production. Second, we call for extensive metagenomics as well as population genomics studies that are crucial to assess the environmental impact that introduction of non-local AMF may have on native AMF communities and populations. Finally, we plead for an ecologically sound use of AMF in efforts to increase food security at a global scale in a sustainable manner.
Resumo:
The phototropin 1 (phot1) blue light receptor mediates a number of adaptive responses, including phototropism, that generally serve to optimize photosynthetic capacity. Phot1 is a plasma membrane-associated protein, but upon irradiation, a fraction is internalized into the cytoplasm. Although this phenomenon has been reported for more than a decade, its biological significance remains elusive. Here, we use a genetic approach to revisit the prevalent hypotheses regarding the functional importance of receptor internalization. Transgenic plants expressing lipidated versions of phot1 that are permanently anchored to the plasma membrane were used to analyse the effect of internalization on receptor turnover, phototropism and other phot1-mediated responses. Myristoylation and farnesylation effectively prevented phot1 internalization. Both modified photoreceptors were found to be fully functional in Arabidopsis, rescuing phototropism and all other phot1-mediated responses tested. Light-mediated phot1 turnover occurred as in the native receptor. Furthermore, our work does not provide any evidence of a role of phot1 internalization in the attenuation of receptor signalling during phototropism. Our results demonstrate that phot1 signalling is initiated at the plasma membrane. They furthermore indicate that release of phot1 into the cytosol is not linked to receptor turnover or desensitization.
Resumo:
Colonization is likely to be more successful for species with an ability to self-fertilize and thus to establish new populations as single individuals. As a result, self-compatibility should be common among colonizing species. This idea, labelled 'Baker's law', has been influential in discussions of sexual-system and mating-system evolution. However, its generality has been questioned, because models of the evolution of dispersal and the mating system predict an association between high dispersal rates and outcrossing rather than selfing, and because of many apparent counter examples to the law. The contrasting predictions made by models invoking Baker's law versus those for the evolution of the mating system and dispersal urges a reassessment of how we should view both these traits. Here, I review the literature on the evolution of mating and dispersal in colonizing species, with a focus on conceptual issues. I argue for the importance of distinguishing between the selfing or outcrossing rate and a simple ability to self-fertilize, as well as for the need for a more nuanced consideration of dispersal. Colonizing species will be characterized by different phases in their life pattern: dispersal to new habitat, implying an ecological sieve on dispersal traits; establishment and a phase of growth following colonization, implying a sieve on reproductive traits; and a phase of demographic stasis at high density, during which new trait associations can evolve through local adaptation. This dynamic means that the sorting of mating-system and dispersal traits should change over time, making simple predictions difficult.
Resumo:
Although the number of invasive bryophytes is much lower than that of higher plants, they threaten habitats that are often species rich and of high conservation relevance. Their potential of spread has, however, never been determined. Here, we assess whether the three most invasive bryophyte species shifted their niche during the invasion process and whether the extent of the study area defined to calibrate the model (geographic background, GB) affects model transferability. We then determine whether ecological niche models (ENMs) developed in their native range can be projected in other areas to assess their invasive potential. The macroclimatic niches of Campylopus introflexus, Orthodontium lineare and Lophocolea semiteres were compared in their native range (Southern Hemisphere) and in their invasion range (Northern Hemisphere) using ordination techniques. ENMs from an ensemble model were calibrated in the native range and projected onto the Northern Hemisphere using different GBs. No evidence for niche expansion in the invaded range was found and the species occur in the invaded range under climate conditions that are similar to those in the native range. The performance of the models to predict occurrences in the invaded range increased with the extent of the GB. The potential range of all species included entire regions on continents where they are still absent. The expansion of the investigated species appears to be constrained by climate conditions that are similar to those currently prevailing in their native range, which is consistent with our failure to demonstrate macroclimatic niche shift in the invaded range. The use of large GBs is recommended in such vagile organisms with large, disjunct distributions. The models indicated that invasive bryophyte species might become a threat in central and eastern Europe, North America and eastern Asia if accidentally introduced or naturally dispersed.
Resumo:
Glyoxysomes are specialized peroxisomes present in various plant organs such as germinating cotyledons or senescing leaves. They are the site of beta-oxidation and of the glyoxylate cycle. These consecutive pathways are essential to the maintenance of gluconeogenesis initiated by the degradation of reserve or structural lipids. In contrast to mitochondrial beta-oxidation, which is prevalent in animal cells, glyoxysomal beta-oxidation and the glyoxylate cycle have no direct access to the mitochondrial respiratory chain because of the impermeability of the glyoxysomal membrane to the reduced cofactors. The necessity of NAD(+) regeneration can conceivably be fulfilled by membrane redox chains and/or by transmembrane shuttles. Experimental evidence based on the active metabolic roles of higher plant glyoxysomes and yeast peroxisomes suggests the coexistence of two mechanisms, namely a reductase/peroxidase membrane redox chain and a malate/aspartate shuttle susceptible to transfer electrons to the mitochondrial ATP generating system. Such a model interconnects beta-oxidation, the glyoxylate cycle, the respiratory chain and gluconeogenesis in such a way that glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase is an essential and exclusive component of beta-oxidation (NAD(+) regeneration). Consequently, the classical view of the glyoxylate cycle is superseded by a tentative reactional scheme deprived of cyclic character.
Resumo:
Plants must constantly adapt to a changing light environment in order to optimize energy conversion through the process of photosynthesis and to limit photodamage. In addition, plants use light cues for timing of key developmental transitions such as initiation of reproduction (transition to flowering). Plants are equipped with a battery of photoreceptors enabling them to sense a very broad light spectrum spanning from UV-B to far-red wavelength (280-750nm). In this review we briefly describe the different families of plant photosensory receptors and the mechanisms by which they transduce environmental information to influence numerous aspects of plant growth and development throughout their life cycle.
Resumo:
Les bactéries du genre Pseudomonas ont la capacité étonnante de s'adapter à différents habitats et d'y survivre, ce qui leur a permis de conquérir un large éventail de niches écologiques et d'interagir avec différents organismes hôte. Les espèces du groupe Pseudomonas fluorescens peuvent être facilement isolées de la rhizosphère et sont communément connues comme des Pseudomonas bénéfiques pour les plantes. Elles sont capables d'induire la résistance systémique des plantes, d'induire leur croissance et de contrer des phytopathogènes du sol. Un sous-groupe de ces Pseudomonas a de plus développé la capacité d'infecter et de tuer certaines espèces d'insectes. Approfondir les connaissances sur l'interaction de ces bactéries avec les insectes pourraient conduire au développement de nouveaux biopesticides pour la protection des cultures. Le but de cette thèse est donc de mieux comprendre la base moléculaire, l'évolution et la régulation de la pathogénicité des Pseudomonas plante-bénéfiques envers les insectes. Plus spécifiquement, ce travail a été orienté sur l'étude de la production de la toxine insecticide appelée Fit et sur l'indentification d'autres facteurs de virulence participant à la toxicité de la bactérie envers les insectes. Dans la première partie de ce travail, la régulation de la production de la toxine Fit a été évaluée par microscopie à épifluorescence en utilisant des souches rapportrices de Pseudomonas protegens CHA0 qui expriment la toxine insecticide fusionnée à une protéine fluorescente rouge, au site natif du gène de la toxine. Celle-ci a été détectée uniquement dans l'hémolymphe des insectes et pas sur les racines des plantes, ni dans les milieux de laboratoire standards, indiquant une production dépendante de l'hôte. L'activation de la production de la toxine est contrôlée par trois protéines régulatrices dont l'histidine kinase FitF, essentielle pour un contrôle précis de l'expression et possédant un domaine "senseur" similaire à celui de la kinase DctB qui régule l'absorption de carbone chez les Protéobactéries. Il est donc probable que, durant l'évolution de FitF, un réarrangement de ce domaine "senseur" largement répandu ait contribué à une production hôte-spécifique de la toxine. Les résultats de cette étude suggèrent aussi que l'expression de la toxine Fit est plutôt réprimée en présence de composés dérivés des plantes qu'induite par la perception d'un signal d'insecte spécifique. Dans la deuxième partie de ce travail, des souches mutantes ciblant des facteurs de virulence importants identifiés dans des pathogènes connus ont été générées, dans le but d'identifier ceux avec une virulence envers les insectes atténuée. Les résultats ont suggéré que l'antigène O du lipopolysaccharide (LPS) et le système régulateur à deux composantes PhoP/PhoQ contribuent significativement à la virulence de P. protegens CHA0. La base génétique de la biosynthèse de l'antigène O dans les Pseudomonas plante-bénéfiques et avec une activité insecticide a été élucidée et a révélé des différences considérables entre les lignées suite à des pertes de gènes ou des acquisitions de gènes par transfert horizontal durant l'évolution de certaines souches. Les chaînes latérales du LPS ont été montrées comme vitales pour une infection des insectes réussie par la souche CHA0, après ingestion ou injection. Les Pseudomonas plante-bénéfiques, avec une activité insecticide sont naturellement résistants à la polymyxine B, un peptide antimicrobien modèle. La protection contre ce composé antimicrobien particulier dépend de la présence de l'antigène O et de la modification du lipide A, une partie du LPS, avec du 4-aminoarabinose. Comme les peptides antimicrobiens cationiques jouent un rôle important dans le système immunitaire des insectes, l'antigène O pourrait être important chez les Pseudomonas insecticides pour surmonter les mécanismes de défense de l'hôte. Le système PhoP/PhoQ, connu pour contrôler les modifications du lipide A chez plusieurs bactéries pathogènes, a été identifié chez Pseudomonas chlororaphis PCL1391 et P. protegens CHA0. Pour l'instant, il n'y a pas d'évidence que des modifications du lipide A contribuent à la pathogénicité de cette bactérie envers les insectes. Cependant, le senseur-kinase PhoQ est requis pour une virulence optimale de la souche CHA0, ce qui suggère qu'il régule aussi l'expression des facteurs de virulence de cette bactérie. Les découvertes de cette thèse démontrent que certains Pseudomonas associés aux plantes sont de véritables pathogènes d'insectes et donnent quelques indices sur l'évolution de ces microbes pour survivre dans l'insecte-hôte et éventuellement le tuer. Les résultats suggèrent également qu'une recherche plus approfondie est nécessaire pour comprendre comment ces bactéries sont capables de contourner ou surmonter la réponse immunitaire de l'hôte et de briser les barrières physiques pour envahir l'insecte lors d'une infection orale. Pour cela, les futures études ne devraient pas uniquement se concentrer sur le côté bactérien de l'interaction hôte-microbe, mais aussi étudier l'infection du point de vue de l'hôte. Les connaissances gagnées sur la pathogénicité envers les insectes des Pseudomonas plante-bénéfiques donnent un espoir pour une future application en agriculture, pour protéger les plantes, non seulement contre les maladies, mais aussi contre les insectes ravageurs. -- Pseudomonas bacteria have the astonishing ability to survive within and adapt to different habitats, which has allowed them to conquer a wide range of ecological niches and to interact with different host organisms. Species of the Pseudomonas fluorescens group can readily be isolated from plant roots and are commonly known as plant-beneficial pseudomonads. They are capable of promoting plant growth, inducing systemic resistance in the plant host and antagonizing soil-borne phytopathogens. A defined subgroup of these pseudomonads evolved in addition the ability to infect and kill certain insect species. Profound knowledge about the interaction of these particular bacteria with insects could lead to the development of novel biopesticides for crop protection. This thesis thus aimed at a better understanding of the molecular basis, evolution and regulation of insect pathogenicity in plant-beneficial pseudomonads. More specifically, it was outlined to investigate the production of an insecticidal toxin termed Fit and to identify additional factors contributing to the entomopathogenicity of the bacteria. In the first part of this work, the regulation of Fit toxin production was probed by epifluorescence microscopy using reporter strains of Pseudomonas protegens CHAO that express a fusion between the insecticidal toxin and a red fluorescent protein in place of the native toxin gene. The bacterium was found to express its insecticidal toxin only in insect hemolymph but not on plant roots or in common laboratory media. The host-dependent activation of Fit toxin production is controlled by three local regulatory proteins. The histidine kinase of this regulatory system, FitF, is essential for the tight control of toxin expression and shares a sensing domain with DctB, a sensor kinase regulating carbon uptake in Proteobacteria. It is therefore likely that shuffling of a ubiquitous sensor domain during the evolution of FitF contributed to host- specific production of the Fit toxin. Findings of this study additionally suggest that host-specific expression of the Fit toxin is mainly achieved by repression in the presence of plant-derived compounds rather than by induction upon perceiving an insect-specific signal molecule. In the second part of this thesis, mutant strains were generated that lack factors previously shown to be important for virulence in prominent pathogens. A screening for attenuation in insect virulence suggested that lipopolysaccharide (LPS) O-antigen and the PhoP-PhoQ two-component regulatory system significantly contribute to virulence of P. protegens CHAO. The genetic basis of O-antigen biosynthesis in plant-beneficial pseudomonads displaying insect pathogenicity was elucidated and revealed extensive differences between lineages due to reduction and horizontal acquisition of gene clusters during the evolution of several strains. Specific 0 side chains of LPS were found to be vital for strain CHAO to successfully infect insects by ingestion or upon injection. Insecticidal pseudomonads with plant-beneficial properties were observed to be naturally resistant to polymyxin B, a model antimicrobial peptide. Protection against this particular antimicrobial compound was dependent on the presence of O-antigen and modification of the lipid A portion of LPS with 4-aminoarabinose. Since cationic antimicrobial peptides play a major role in the immune system of insects, O-antigenic polysaccharides could be important for insecticidal pseudomonads to overcome host defense mechanisms. The PhoP-PhoQ system, which is well-known to control lipid A modifications in several pathogenic bacteria, was identified in Pseudomonas chlororaphis PCL1391 and P. protegens CHAO. No evidence was found so far that lipid A modifications contribute to insect pathogenicity in this bacterium. However, the sensor kinase PhoQ was required for full virulence of strain CHAO suggesting that it additionally regulates the expression of virulence factors in this bacterium. The findings of this thesis demonstrate that certain plant-associated pseudomonads are true insect pathogens and give some insights into how these microbes evolved to survive within and eventually kill the insect host. Results however also point out that more in-depth research is needed to know how exactly these fascinating bacteria manage to bypass or overcome host immune responses and to breach physical barriers to invade insects upon oral infection. To achieve this, future studies should not only focus on the bacterial side of the microbe-host interactions but also investigate the infection from a host-oriented view. The knowledge gained about the entomopathogenicity of plant-beneficial pseudomonads gives hope for their future application in agriculture to protect plants not only against plant diseases but also against insect pests.
Resumo:
The role of humans in facilitating the rapid spread of plants at a scale that is considered invasive is one manifestation of the Anthropocene, now framed as a geological period in which humans are the dominant force in landscape transformation. Invasive plant management faces intensified challenges, and can no longer be viewed in terms of 'eradication' or 'restoration of original landscapes'. In this perspectives piece, we focus on the practice and experience of people engaged in invasive plant management, using examples from Australia and Canada. We show how managers 1) face several pragmatic trade-offs; 2) must reconcile diverse views, even within stakeholder groups; 3) must balance competing temporal scales; 4) encounter tensions with policy; and 5) face critical and under-acknowledged labour challenges. These themes show the variety of considerations based on which invasive plant managers make complex decisions about when, where, and how to intervene. Their widespread pragmatic acceptance of small, situated gains (as well as losses) combines with impressive long-term commitments to the task of invasives management. We suggest that the actual practice of weed management challenges those academic perspectives that still aspire to attain pristine nature.
Resumo:
Understanding the factors that shape adaptive genetic variation across species niches has become of paramount importance in evolutionary ecology, especially to understand how adaptation to changing climate affects the geographic range of species. The distribution of adaptive alleles in the ecological niche is determined by the emergence of novel mutations, their fitness consequences and gene flow that connects populations across species niches. Striking demographical differences and source sink dynamics of populations between the centre and the margin of the niche can play a major role in the emergence and spread of adaptive alleles. Although some theoretical predictions have long been proposed, the origin and distribution of adaptive alleles within species niches remain untested. In this paper, we propose and discuss a novel empirical approach that combines landscape genetics with species niche modelling, to test whether alleles that confer local adaptation are more likely to occur in either marginal or central populations of species niches. We illustrate this new approach by using a published data set of 21 alpine plant species genotyped with a total of 2483 amplified fragment length polymorphisms (AFLP), distributed over more than 1733 sampling sites across the Alps. Based on the assumption that alleles that were statistically associated with environmental variables were adaptive, we found that adaptive alleles in the margin of a species niche were also present in the niche centre, which suggests that adaptation originates in the niche centre. These findings corroborate models of species range evolution, in which the centre of the niche contributes to the emergence of novel adaptive alleles, which diffuse towards niche margins and facilitate niche and range expansion through subsequent local adaptation. Although these results need to be confirmed via fitness measurements in natural populations and functionally characterised genetic sequences, this study provides a first step towards understanding how adaptive genetic variation emerges and shapes species niches and geographic ranges along environmental gradients.
Resumo:
Aim Previous research on how climatic niches vary across species ranges has focused on a limited number of species, mostly invasive, and has not, to date, been very conclusive. Here we assess the degree of niche conservatism between distant populations of native alpine plant species that have been separated for thousands of years. Location European Alps and Fennoscandia. Methods Of the studied pool of 888 terrestrial vascular plant species occurring in both the Alps and Fennoscandia, we used two complementary approaches to test and quantify climatic-niche shifts for 31 species having strictly disjunct populations and 358 species having either a contiguous or a patchy distribution with distant populations. First, we used species distribution modelling to test for a region effect on each species' climatic niche. Second, we quantified niche overlap and shifts in niche width (i.e. ecological amplitude) and position (i.e. ecological optimum) within a bi-dimensional climatic space. Results Only one species (3%) of the 31 species with strictly disjunct populations and 58 species (16%) of the 358 species with distant populations showed a region effect on their climatic niche. Niche overlap was higher for species with strictly disjunct populations than for species with distant populations and highest for arctic-alpine species. Climatic niches were, on average, wider and located towards warmer and wetter conditions in the Alps. Main conclusion Climatic niches seem to be generally conserved between populations that are separated between the Alps and Fennoscandia and have probably been so for 10,000-15,000 years. Therefore, the basic assumption of species distribution models that a species' climatic niche is constant in space and time - at least on time scales 104 years or less - seems to be largely valid for arctic-alpine plants.
Resumo:
Georgia is known for its extraordinary rich biodiversity of plants, which may now be threatened due to the spread of invasive alien plants (IAP). We aimed to identify (i) the most prominent IAP out of 9 selected potentially invasive and harmful IAP IAP by predicting thetheir distribution of 9 selected IAP under current and future climate conditions in Georgia as well as in its 43 Protected Areas, as a proxy for areas of high conservation value and (ii) the Protected Areas most at risk due to these IAP. We used species distribution models based on 6 climate variables and then filtered the obtained distributions based on maps of soil and vegetation types, and on recorded occurrences, resulting into the predicted ecological distribution of the 9 IAP's at a resolution of 1km2. We foundOur habitat suitability analysis showed that Ambrosia artemisiifolia, (24% and 40%) Robinia pseudoacaia (14% and 19%) and Ailanthus altissima (9% and 11%) have the largest potential distribution are the most abundant (predicted % area covered)d) IAP, with Ailanthus altissima the potentially most increasing one over the next fifty years (from 9% to 13% and from 11% to 25%), for Georgia and the Protected Areas, respectively. Furthermore, our results show indicate two areas in Georgia that are under specifically high threat, i.e. the area around Tbilisi and an area in the western part of Georgia (Adjara), both at lower altitudes. Our procedure to identify areas of high conservation value most at risk by IAP has been applied for the first time. It will help national authorities in prioritizing their measures to protect Georgia's outstanding biodiversity from the negative impact of IAP.
Resumo:
AimHigh intra-specific genetic diversity is necessary for species adaptation to novel environments under climate change, but species tracking suitable conditions are losing alleles through successive founder events during range shift. Here, we investigated the relationship between range shift since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and extant population genetic diversity across multiple plant species to understand variability in species responses. LocationThe circumpolar Arctic and northern temperate alpine ranges. MethodsWe estimated the climatic niches of 30 cold-adapted plant species using range maps coupled with species distribution models and hindcasted species suitable areas to reconstructions of the mid-Holocene and LGM climates. We computed the species-specific migration distances from the species glacial refugia to their current distribution and correlated distances to extant genetic diversity in 1295 populations. Differential responses among species were related to life-history traits. ResultsWe found a negative association between inferred migration distances from refugia and genetic diversities in 25 species, but only 11 had statistically significant negative slopes. The relationships between inferred distance and population genetic diversity were steeper for insect-pollinated species than wind-pollinated species, but the difference among pollination system was marginally independent from phylogenetic autocorrelation. Main conclusionThe relationships between inferred migration distances and genetic diversities in 11 species, independent from current isolation, indicate that past range shifts were associated with a genetic bottleneck effect with an average of 21% loss of genetic diversity per 1000km(-1). In contrast, the absence of relationship in many species also indicates that the response is species specific and may be modulated by plant pollination strategies or result from more complex historical contingencies than those modelled here.
Resumo:
Aim: Emerging polyploids may depend on environmental niche shifts for successful establishment. Using the alpine plant Ranunculus kuepferi as a model system, we explore the niche shift hypothesis at different spatial resolutions and in contrasting parts of the species range. Location: European Alps. Methods: We sampled 12 individuals from each of 102 populations of R. kuepferi across the Alps, determined their ploidy levels, derived coarse-grain (100x100m) environmental descriptors for all sampling sites by downscaling WorldClim maps, and calculated fine-scale environmental descriptors (2x2m) from indicator values of the vegetation accompanying the sampled individuals. Both coarse and fine-scale variables were further computed for 8239 vegetation plots from across the Alps. Subsequently, we compared niche optima and breadths of diploid and tetraploid cytotypes by combining principal components analysis and kernel smoothing procedures. Comparisons were done separately for coarse and fine-grain data sets and for sympatric, allopatric and the total set of populations. Results: All comparisons indicate that the niches of the two cytotypes differ in optima and/or breadths, but results vary in important details. The whole-range analysis suggests differentiation along the temperature gradient to be most important. However, sympatric comparisons indicate that this climatic shift was not a direct response to competition with diploid ancestors. Moreover, fine-grained analyses demonstrate niche contraction of tetraploids, especially in the sympatric range, that goes undetected with coarse-grained data. Main conclusions: Although the niche optima of the two cytotypes differ, separation along ecological gradients was probably less decisive for polyploid establishment than a shift towards facultative apomixis, a particularly effective strategy to avoid minority cytotype exclusion. In addition, our results suggest that coarse-grained analyses overestimate niche breadths of widely distributed taxa. Niche comparison analyses should hence be conducted at environmental data resolutions appropriate for the organism and question under study.