Structural blueprint and ontogeny determine the adaptive value of the plastic response to competition in clonal plants: a modelling approach
Authored by M Garbey, A-K Bittebiere, M Smaoui-Feki, B Clement, C Mony
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1007/s10682-013-9688-1
Sponsors:
French National Research Agency (ANR)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Local competitive interactions strongly influence plant community
dynamics. To maintain their performance under competition, clonal plants
may plastically modify their network architecture to grow in the
direction of least interference. The adaptive value of this plastic
avoidance response may depend, however, on traits linked with the
plant's structural blueprint and ontogeny. We tested this hypothesis
using virtual populations. We used an Individual Based Model to simulate
competitive interactions among clones within a plant population. Clonal
growth was studied under three competition intensities in plastic and
non-plastic individuals. Plasticity buffered the negative impacts of
competition at intermediate densities of competitors by promoting clone
clumping. Success despite competition was promoted by traits linked with
(1) the plant's structural blueprint (weak apical dominance and
sympodial growth) and (2) ontogenetic processes, with an increasing or a
decreasing dependence of the elongation process on the branch generation
level or length along the competition intensity gradient respectively.
The adaptive value of the plastic avoidance response depended on the
same traits. This response only modulated their importance for clone
success. Our results show that structural blueprint and ontogeny can be
primary filters of plasticity and can have strong implications for
evolutionary ecology, as they may explain why clonal plants have
developed many species-specific plastic avoidance behaviours.
Tags
Adaptation
Spatial dynamics
Performance
phenotypic plasticity
Heterogeneity
Integration
Communities
Grassland perennials
Trifolium-repens
Growth forms