Return to search

Ecotypic Variation in Johnsongrass in Its Invaded U.S. Range

Biological invasions have been observed throughout the world for centuries, often with major consequences to biodiversity and food security. Tying invasion to species identity and associated traits has led to numerous hypotheses on why, and where, some species are invasive. In recent decades, attention to intraspecific variation among invaders has produced questions about their adaptation to climate, land use, and environmental change. I examined the intraspecific variation of invasive Johnsongrass's (Sorghum halepense (L.) Pers.) seedling stress response, propagule cold tolerance, and large-scale niche dynamics for correlation with populations' climatic and ecotypic (i.e., agricultural vs. non-agricultural) origin. Overall, I found a greater number of home climate effects than ecotypic effects on various traits. Non-agricultural seed from cold climates and agricultural seed from warm climates germinated more and faster, while non-agricultural seedlings showed uniform chlorophyll production regardless of home soil carbon origin, unlike their agricultural counterparts. Neither seedling stress response nor propagule cold tolerance interacted with ecotype identity; however, drought stress varied with population origins' aridity and soil fertility, and seed from warm/humid and cold/dry climates was most germinable. Comparison of seed and rhizome cold tolerance also suggested that the latter is a conserved trait that may be limiting S. halepense poleward range expansion. This physiological limit, an unchanged cold temperature niche boundary between continents and ecotypes, and a narrowed niche following transition to non-agricultural lands all imply low likelihood of spread based on climatic niche shift. Instead, evidence points to range expansion driven primarily by climate change and highlights agriculture's role in facilitating invasibility. This tandem approach to climate and land use as drivers of intraspecific variation is transferable to other taxa and can help refine our conception of and response to invasion in the Anthropocene. / Doctor of Philosophy / Exotic invasive species are a global problem, threatening biodiversity and biosecurity now and in the future. In the last several decades, ecologists have studied many individual invaders and their traits to understand what drives their spread. More recently, abundant differences in traits between populations within an invasive species have raised questions about humans' role in facilitating invasion through climate change, land use, and other disturbances. I studied the invasive Johnsongrass's (Sorghum halepense (L.) Pers.) response to drought, nutrient limitation, and freezing to detect differences between populations based on their climate and ecotype (agricultural vs. non-agricultural) origin. I also tracked differences in the climates the species occupied across the globe and North America and projected its future distribution under climate change. Overall, I found a greater number of home climate effects than ecotypic effects on various traits. Non-agricultural seed from cold climates and agricultural seed from warm climates germinated the most, while non-agricultural seedlings performed consistently regardless of soil carbon origin, unlike their agricultural counterparts. In addition, drought stress varied with population origins' rainfall and soil fertility, and seed germination favored warm/humid and cold/dry origin. Rhizome (underground stem) cold tolerance appears to be a trait that limits S. halepense poleward range expansion. Along with no change in the coldest climates occupied worldwide and no spread to new climates with transition to non-agricultural lands, this implies that Johnsongrass is unlikely to expand its range without external forces. Instead future range expansion will likely be driven by climate change. This coupled approach to climate and land use affecting invasion is transferable to other species and can help refine both our concepts and response strategies.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/103611
Date28 May 2021
CreatorsLakoba, Vasiliy T.
ContributorsPlant Pathology, Physiology and Weed Science, Barney, Jacob, Strahm, Brian D., Thomas, Valerie A., Welbaum, Gregory E.
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation
FormatETD, application/pdf, application/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

Page generated in 0.0026 seconds