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Lajoie, Geneviève; Vellend, Mark 2019-02-07 The match between functional trait variation in communities and environmental gradients is maintained by three processes: phenotypic plasticity and genetic differentiation (intraspecific processes), and species turnover (interspecific). Recently, evidence has emerged suggesting that intraspecific variation might have a potentially large role in driving functional community composition and response to environmental change. However, empirical evidence quantifying the respective importance of phenotypic plasticity and genetic differentiation relative to species turnover is still lacking. We performed a reciprocal transplant experiment using a common herbaceous plant species (Oxalis montana) among low-, mid-, and high-elevation sites to first quantify the contributions of plasticity and genetic differentiation in driving intraspecific variation in three traits: height, specific leaf area and leaf area. We next compared the contributions of these intraspecific drivers of community trait-environment matching to that of species turnover, which had been previously assessed along the same elevational gradient. Plasticity was the dominant driver of intraspecific trait variation across elevation in all traits, with only a small contribution of genetic differentiation among populations. Local adaptation was not detected to a major extent along the gradient. Fitness components were greatest in O. montana plants with trait values closest to the local community-weighted means, thus supporting the common assumption that community-weighted mean trait values represent selective optima. Our results suggest that community-level trait responses to ongoing climate change should be mostly mediated by species turnover, even at the small spatial scale of our study, with an especially small contribution of evolutionary adaptation within species. https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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Rivest, Sébastien; Lajoie, Geneviève; Watts, David; Vellend, Mark 2021-03-20 <p style="text-align:justify;"><b>Premise</b>: One of the best-documented ecological responses to climate warming involves temporal shifts of phenological events. However, we lack an understanding of how phenological responses to climate change vary among populations of the same species. Such variability has the potential to affect flowering synchrony among populations and hence the potential for gene flow.</p> <p style="text-align:justify;"><b>Methods</b>: To test if an earlier start of the growing season affects the potential for gene flow among populations, we quantified the distributions of flowering times of two spring-flowering plants (<i>Trillium erectum</i> and <i>Erythronium americanum</i>) over six years along an elevation gradient. We developed a novel model-based metric of potential gene flow between pairs of populations to quantify the potential for pollen-mediated gene flow based on flowering phenology.</p> <p style="text-align:justify;"><b>Results</b>: For both species investigated, earlier onset of spring led to greater separation of peak flowering dates across the elevation gradient. For <i>T. erectum</i>, but not <i>E. americanum</i>, this<i> </i>was also associated with a reduction in potential gene flow.</p> <p style="text-align:justify;"><b>Conclusion</b>: Our study suggests that climate change could decrease gene flow via phenological separation among populations along climatic gradients. We also provide a novel method for quantifying potential pollen-mediated gene flow using data on flowering phenology, based on a quantitative, more biologically interpretable model than other available metrics.</p>
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Park, Jungsoo; Davis, Katherine; Lajoie, Geneviève; Parfrey, Laura Wegener 2022 Additional file 2. Supplementary Table 2 showing overlapping indicator ASVs of F. distichus on Calvert Island across sampling events and their overall specificity to determine core taxa. In step2, F. distichus-indicator ASVs at greater than 0.7 IndVal index are evaluated. 12 bacterial ASVs determined by the two-step approach are in bold. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode