AOBPreview originally published online on July 15, 2006
Annals of Botany 2006 98(3):609-618; doi:10.1093/aob/mcl137
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Spore Fitness Components Do Not Differ Between Diploid and Allotetraploid Species of Dryopteris (Dryopteridaceae)
Department of Natural Sciences and Applied Physics, University Rey Juan Carlos, Tulipán s/n, Móstoles, E-28933, Spain
* For correspondence. E-mail luis.quintanilla{at}urjc.es
Received: 21 November 2005 Returned for revision: 13 April 2006 Accepted: 20 May 2006 Published electronically: 15 July 2006
| ABSTRACT |
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Background and Aims Although allopolyploidy is a prevalent speciation mechanism in plants, its adaptive consequences are poorly understood. In addition, the effects of allopolyploidy per se (i.e. hybridization and chromosome doubling) can be confounded with those of subsequent evolutionary divergence between allopolyploids and related diploids. This report assesses whether fern species with the same ploidy level or the same altitudinal distribution have similar germination responses to temperature. The effects of polyploidy on spore abortion and spore size are also investigated, since both traits may have adaptive consequences.
Methods Three allotetraploid (Dryopteris corleyi, D. filix-mas and D. guanchica) and three related diploid taxa (D. aemula, D. affinis ssp. affinis and D. oreades) were studied. Spores were collected from 24 populations in northern Spain. Four spore traits were determined: abortion percentage, size, germination time and germination percentage. Six incubation temperatures were tested: 8, 15, 20, 25 and 32 °C, and alternating 8/15 °C.
Key Results Allotetraploids had bigger spores than diploid progenitors, whereas spore abortion percentages were generally similar. Germination times decreased with increasing temperatures in a wide range of temperatures (825 °C), although final germination percentages were similar among species irrespective of their ploidy level. Only at low temperature (8 °C) did two allotetraploid species reach higher germination percentages than diploid parents. Allotetraploids showed faster germination rates, which would probably give them a competitive advantage over diploid parents. Germination behaviour was not correlated with altitudinal distribution of species.
Conclusions The results of this study suggest that (i) relative fitness of allopolyploids at sporogenesis does not differ from that of diploid parents and (ii) neither does allopolyploidization involve a change in the success of spore germination.
Key words: Allopolyploidy, Dryopteris, fitness component, northern Spain, spore abortion, spore germination, temperature
| INTRODUCTION |
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Polyploidy is an important mode of speciation in vascular plants. A recent estimate in angiosperms indicates that approx. 70 % of all species are polyploids (Masterson, 1994
Fitness comparison of related cytotypes should consider the consecutive different life stages of individuals (Campbell, 1991
). The independent gametophytic generation of pteridophytes comprises several sequential stages connected by transitional processes, i.e. sporogenesis, spore dispersal and germination, gametophyte survival and fecundity, each process constituting a fitness component (van Tienderen, 2000
). Polyploids, at least those of recent origin, must overcome some initial drawbacks, such as the incidence of meiotic aberrations (e.g. irregular disjunction resulting from univalent and multivalent formation) and other processes (reviewed in Ramsey and Schemske, 2002
) which lead to the production of non-viable spores. Consequently, neopolyploid pteridophytes might have a fitness disadvantage at sporogenesis. Unfortunately, the available information on this possibility is scarce compared with the abundant data on pollen viability and seed set in angiosperms (Ramsey and Schemske, 2002
). For example, Wagner and Chen (1965)
noted that Dryopteris species have some abortive spores and suggested that polyploids show more irregular spores than diploids. In contrast, Whittier and Braggins (1994)
found similar abortion percentages in spores from diploid and tetraploid Psilotum nudum populations. Sheffield et al. (1993)
obtained high germination percentages for apparently aneuploid spores of triploid Pteridium aquilinum.
In the context of plant polyploidy, one of the most thoroughly investigated fitness components is diaspore (seed or spore) germination (e.g. Whittier and Braggins, 1994
; Burton and Husband, 2000
). Phenotypic differences between polyploids and related diploids at any life stage may be the consequence of three mechanisms. First, chromosome doubling leads to an increase in nucleus and cell sizes, which in turn may affect whole-plant morphology (Stebbins, 1971
). Pteridophyte spores (e.g. Moran, 1982
) and angiosperm seeds (e.g. Bretagnolle et al., 1995
) are frequently larger in polyploids than in diploid parents. The relatively slower germination rate of some polyploids may, in part, result from lower metabolic rates and slower mitotic division rates of larger cells with more chromosomes (Gottschalk, 1976
; Cavalier-Smith, 1978
). Secondly, in addition to these biophysical effects of increased DNA content, polyploidy usually involves important genetic and epigenetic modifications (Wendel, 2000
; Liu and Wendel, 2003
). Among them, increased heterozygosity has been correlated with increased vigour of polyploids in diaspore germination, and other fitness components (e.g. Soltis and Rieseberg, 1986
; Tomekpe and Lumaret, 1991
). Thirdly, phenotypic differences between related cytotypes may reflect evolution since the time of polyploid formation (Bretagnolle and Lumaret, 1995
), i.e. genetic differentiation via natural selection, genetic drift, etc.
Comparative investigations on spore germination of allopolyploid ferns and their progenitors show taxa-specific results. For example, spore germination of some allotetraploid Polypodium (Kott and Peterson, 1974
), Polystichum (Pangua et al., 2003
) and Dryopteris (Whittier, 1970
) was faster and reached higher percentages than that of their diploid ancestors. In contrast, two allotetraploid Dryopteris, D. corleyi and D. guanchica, and their common diploid parent, D. aemula, showed similar germination percentages (Quintanilla et al., 2002
). Several allotetraploid Asplenium also had germination traits similar to those of their diploid parents (Prada et al., 1995
). The main goal of the present study was to determine the consequences of allopolyploidy on some spore fitness components and to identify any adaptive implications in a model group of Dryopteris species.
Dryopteris in northern Spain constitutes a suitable experimental set to analyse the effects of genetic and environmental factors on spore germination. This reticulate complex includes diploids, triploids and tetraploids with well established genomic relationships (e.g. Gibby et al., 1977
; Fraser-Jenkins, 1982
; Viane, 1986
; Widén et al., 1996
; Geiger and Ranker, 2005
), growing in a variety of habitats. In addition, the sporophytes of most species lack extensive clonal growth and thus depend on the establishment and mating of gametophytes. In this report, two fitness components are studied, i.e. spore abortion percentage and germination percentage; and two spore traits with potentially adaptive consequences, i.e. spore size and germination rate. Four hierarchical factors are considered: ploidy level, altitudinal distribution, species and population. Differences both among species and among populations have been reported in fern spore germination (e.g. Cousens, 1981
; Pangua et al., 1994
; Quintanilla et al., 2000
). The following questions are specifically addressed. (a) Do diploids and allotetraploids differ in sporogenesis success or spore size? (b) What are the effects of temperature on germination percentage and germination rate of the species, considering their interpopulation variation? (c) Do species with the same ploidy level have similar germination behaviour? (d) Are there common germination responses to temperature among species with similar altitudinal distribution?
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Studied taxa
Six Dryopteris taxa (buckler-ferns) naturally growing in Spain were included: D. aemula, D. affinis ssp. affinis, D. corleyi, D. filix-mas, D. guanchica and D. oreades. Taxa were identified on the basis of macro- and micromorphological characters (see Salvo and Arrabal, 1986
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Plant material
Four populations per species were sampled in northern Spain (Table 2). Spores were obtained from ten individuals randomly selected per population. Fragments of lamina were collected with mature but closed sporangia (the only exception being D. oreades, which had started spore release at the collection date). Spore release was promoted by drying the fragments on sheets of smooth paper for 2 weeks in the laboratory. Spores from the ten individuals of each population were then pooled prior to beginning germination tests. Samples of these pools were mounted in DePeX (BDH Chemicals, Poole, UK) to determine spore abortion and spore size. Spore abortion percentage was estimated by counting the number of aborted spores in four random samples of 100 spores per population. Spores were considered aborted when they lacked a protoplast or were collapsed. Spore size was based on a measurement of the longest axis excluding the perispore, i.e. exospore length. Thirty non-aborted spores were measured from every population. Measurements were made using a light microscope (600x) equipped with a drawing tube, connected to a digitizing tablet (Intuos A3, Wacom, Saitama, Japan) (see Viane, 1990
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Germination tests
Spores were sown on mineral agar (see Dyer, 1979
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Statistical analyses
Generalized linear models (GLMs; McCullagh and Nelder, 1989
A binomial response function was set for the two percentage variables (aborts and total germination) and a logit link function. A gamma error with an inverse link was used for the germination time because under these conditions the explained variation was maximal (Guisan et al., 2002
). Finally the exospore length was modelled with a Gaussian response and an identity link.
2 tests were conducted to evaluate whether or not selected predictors explained a significant fraction of the total deviance (Guisan et al., 2002
).
| RESULTS |
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The spore abortion percentages and the exospore lengths of each population are shown in Fig. 2. The models used to test the effects of ploidy, species and population on these variables are presented in Table 3. Ploidy and species had no significant effect on spore abortion percentage. Almost all populations had low abortion percentages (means <10 %), with the exception of two D. corleyi populations (16 and 20 %). Exospore lengths showed significant differences on all analysed levels: ploidy, species andpopulation. Diploid spores (corresponding to allotetraploids and apogamous diploid D. affinis) were bigger than haploid spores, with wider variation in the former. Exospores of the allotetraploids D. guanchica (species means ± 1 s.e., n=120: 40·3 ± 0·3 µm) and D. filix-mas (40·4 ± 0·3 µm) were slightly longer than those of diploid parents tested, D. aemula (36·4 ± 0·3 µm) and D. oreades (39·0 ± 0·2 µm), respectively. However, the allotetraploid D. corleyi (49·1 ± 0·5 µm) had significantly larger spores than diploid parents, D. aemula and D. oreades. Dryopteris affinis spores (44·6 ± 0·4 µm) were larger than those of the related species tested, D. oreades and D. filix-mas.
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The germination percentages per population under different temperature conditions are presented in Fig. 3, and the germination times are given in Fig. 4. One of the four D. oreades populations was not included in germination tests due to fungal contamination of the culture media. The models used to analyse the effects of ploidy or habitat preference, species, population and temperature on these variables are summarized in Table 4. Overall, except for the most extreme temperatures 8 and 32 °C, the final germination percentages were high, with populations of all species exceeding 85 % at any of the temperature treatments. None of the species germinated at 32 °C. At 8 °C there was a marked decline in germination, but the differences among species were great. Most species germinated slowly and reached low percentages, with population means generally <10 %, and D. aemula showed zero germination. In contrast, D. corleyi and D. guanchica germinated successfully, with most population means >70 %. The effects of 8 and 32 °C were not lethal but inhibitory, as the same spores transferred to adequate conditions (20 °C) did germinate (results not shown). Given the marked inhibitory effects of 8 and 32 °C, both temperatures were excluded from the models to improve statistical power. Habitat, species and population had no significant effects on germination traits (Table 4). Ploidy and incubation temperature significantly affected germination time but not germination percentage (Table 4). Specifically, diploid spores germinated faster than haploid spores and germination times increased with decreasing temperatures (Fig. 4). The times of 8/15 °C treatment were only slightly longer than those at constant 15 °C.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Spore abortion
The present results indicate that success of sporogenesis in Dryopteris is not constrained by allopolyploidy. Spore abortion percentages were low in most populations, and differences owing to ploidy level and species were not significant. This is consistent with the regular bivalent formation observed in the two allotetraploids D. filix-mas (Manton, 1950
Spore abortion percentages were similar in the apogamous D. affinis and the related sexual species D. oreades and D. filix-mas (the three taxa share the D. oreades genome; Table 1). In the 16-meiocyte sporangia of D. affinis, there is virtually no bivalent formation probably due to the presence of two different genomes, one from D. oreades and one from a hypothetical pure D. affinis ancestor (Manton, 1950
; Corley, 1967
). Consequently, all the spores from such sporangia are abortive. However, the majority of sporangia in this hybrid taxon have eight tetraploid meiocytes, giving rise to 32 viable diplospores (Manton, 1950
). Sheffield et al. (1983)
did not find evidence that sporangial development of D. affinis was in any way imperfect, in agreement with the low abortion percentages obtained here.
Spore size
Diploid spores are longer than haploid spores in the studied buckler-ferns. There are also significant differences at the species and population levels. Assuming that the shape of spores approximates a prolate spheroid (see Beyer, 1987
), and that the length : width ratio is a constant, the relative increase in volume with polyploidy is equal to the cube of the relative increase in length. Similarly, the relative increase in surface area is equal to the square of the relative increase in length. For example, the volume of the longest spores (Fig. 2; mean = 50·4 µm in a D. corleyi population) is 2·8 times greater and the surface area is twice that of the shortest spores (mean = 35·8 µm in a D. aemula population).
The increase in volume and reduction in surface-to-volume ratio associated with polyploidy has been described in various cell types and diverse plant groups (Stebbins, 1971
). In ferns, the abundant information on polyploid cell sizes, especially spores and guard cells, confirms these findings (reviewed by Barrington et al., 1986
). However, a similar spore size between polyploids and their diploid progenitors has been reported in several species assemblages, including some Dryopteris (e.g. Britton, 1968
; Wagner, 1971
; Viane, 1985
). It was found that D. guanchica and D. filix-mas have spores slightly bigger than their diploid parents included here, D. aemula and D. oreades, respectively. In contrast, D. corleyi, the allotetraploid derived from these diploids, has exceptionally big spores not only in the context of the results presented here but in the whole European tetraploid Dryopteris (see, for example, lengths in Salvo and Arrabal, 1986
). There is evidence that the cell volume of some polyploid plants tends to decrease over time, towards the levels of related diploids (Butterfass, 1987
). If this tendency was followed by the spore size of allotetraploid Dryopteris, it would support the above-proposed recent origin of D. corleyi.
Spore size also differed among populations within the studied species. The evolutionary significance of intra- and interspecific variation in spore size is not well known, and selective pressures on this character may be complex and even conflicting. For example, the effect of small size may be beneficial to dispersal far from the parent sporophyte but may have adverse effects on gametophyte establishment. Cox and Hickey (1984)
concluded that different climatic conditions among populations explain megaspore size variation in Isoetes. However, since spores of each species were collected within a narrow area with small local variation in climate, differences among populations are probably not a consequence of different ecotypes, but are the outcome of the parent sporophyte environment (see Andersson and Milberg, 1998
, and references therein).
Germination time
Incubation temperature had a marked effect on germination time of all populations from all species. This effect consisted of an increase in time taken for germination to occur with decreasing temperature, especially at 8 °C. The treatment alternating between 8 °C (darkness) and 15 °C (light) yielded germination rates only slightly slower than those at constant 15 °C, indicating that germination rate is mainly constrained by day temperatures.
It was found that diploid spores germinate faster than haploid spores, in agreement with previous studies (e.g. Kott and Peterson, 1974
). Timing of diaspore germination plays a critical role in plant fitness, with earlier germinators usually showing a competitive advantage (reviewed by Verdú and Traveset, 2005
). The leaves of the studied buckler-ferns have a similar phenological pattern, emerging in spring and completing spore maturation during the summer (Willmot, 1989
; Page, 1997
). Spore dispersal also occurs synchronically among these species in late summer (the only exception being D. guanchica, which produces leaves and disperses spores throughout the year; personal observation). Cousens et al. (1985)
suggested that microsites suitable for the growth of gametophytes are rare and may lead to the clustering of many different species in a single small space. In this scenario, differences in rate of germination might increase competitive ability of polyploids vs. diploid parents. Cavalier-Smith (1978)
proposed that chromosome doubling alone (i.e. autopolyploidy) slows down metabolism and growth, probably due to the change in cell geometry. The studied allotetraploid Dryopteris have larger spores than their diploid ancestors, as seen above, and faster germination rates. Thus, hypothetical detrimental effects of increased nucleus and cell sizes may have been counteracted by genetic modifications induced by hybridization, such as increased heterozygosity (Wendel, 2000
; Liu and Wendel, 2003
), or by conventional evolution since the time of allopolyploid origin (Bretagnolle and Lumaret, 1995
).
Germination percentage
Owing to the virtual absence of asexual reproduction in the studied species, spore germination is a prerequisite for sporophyte recruitment. Any competitive advantage of polyploids at germination would favour their establishment and persistence among diploid parents (Rodríguez, 1996
). Nevertheless, allotetraploid and diploid Dryopteris showed similar high germination percentages at incubation temperatures of 8/15, 15, 20 and 25 °C. In contrast, none of the species germinated at 32 °C. Such a type of inhibition has been found previously in the genus (see Haupt, 1992
, and references therein). Extreme temperatures in the spore collection sites are below this value, even on the hottest days of the summer (Fig. 1). However, germination is probably also prevented by lower temperatures between 32 and 25 °C. This could be an adaptation to avoid gametophyte exposure to harmful conditions such as dehydration.
At the other extreme, germination percentages at a constant 8 °C varied considerably among species. Most species germinated slowly and reached very low percentages at this temperature. In the mountains of northern Spain, temperatures drop abruptly after the summer (Fig. 1B), the season of spore dispersal. Thus, many spores will become dormant and will be incorporated into the soil spore bank. Viable spores of Dryopteris spp. have been found in soil samples (Schneller, 1988
; Dyer and Lindsay, 1992
). Spores in the soil bank could avoid freezing temperatures and germinate in the following spring. Dryopteris corleyi and, above all, D. guanchica are the only species that germinated successfully at 8 °C, in contrast to their diploid parents. For example, D. aemula, their common ancestor and, like them, thermophilous (Table 1), was the only species with zero germination at this temperature. The ability of both allotetraploids to germinate at low temperatures may imply a fitness advantage over sympatric congeners. Dryopteris corleyi and D. guanchica occur at low altitudes, where temperatures are mild throughout the year, and winters are almost frost free (Fig. 1A). Earlier gametophyte development of D. corleyi and D. guanchica during the winter would increase competitive success over diploids and reduce hybridization risk. Both allotetraploids form contact zones with their parent D. aemula. Given that the corresponding triploid backcrosses are sterile (Gibby and Widén, 1983
; Pérez and Díaz, 1990
), asynchrony in gametophyte development would prevent ineffectual matings. Consequently, minority cytotype disadvantage (Levin, 1975
) could be reduced or, in other words, the co-existence of diploids and allotetraploids is favoured.
The present study considered only data on the relative fitness components spore set and spore germination percentages. If relative measures of reproductive success are poorly correlated with absolute figures expressed on a per individual basis, then evolutionary inferences drawn from the former may be misleading (see Herrera, 1991
, and references therein). A similar relative success was found among cytotypes in sporogenesis and spore germination. However, allotetraploid Dryopteris have larger leaves than diploid parents (Salvo and Arrabal, 1986
; Rünk et al., 2004
), and, apparently, produce more spores per sporophyte (personal observation). This absolute reproductive advantage may favour polyploid performance.
Conclusions
Of the species studied, allotetraploids have slightly bigger spores, whereas spore abortion percentages are not significantly different from those of diploid ancestors. The only exception is the narrow endemic D. corleyi, with high abortion percentages and giant spores that may indicate recent allopolyploidization. Germination times decreased as temperatures increased over the range 825 °C, although final germination percentages were generally similar among species irrespective of their habitat preference or ploidy level. At 8 °C, however, only the allotetraploids D. corleyi and D. guanchica reached high germination percentages. It can thus be concluded that any realistic assessment of intercytotype differences at spore germination must consider a broad range of conditions, as has been suggested for a variety of plant fitness components (e.g. Heywood and Levin, 1984
; Stratton and Bennington, 1998
; Herrera, 2000
). Further culture experiments are needed to assess the effects of other environmental factors, such as light and nutrient availability, on the germination of related cytotypes. In addition, although allotetraploids show faster germination rates, which would probably give them a competitive advantage, allopolyploidy lacks a general and constant effect on percentage of germination. Recent studies found many genic and genomic changes within the early generations after polyploidy formation (e.g. Song et al., 1995
; Shaked et al., 2001
; Adams et al., 2003
). Consequently, hypothetical fitness constraints of allopolyploidization on sporogenesis or spore germination may have been counteracted by natural selection. Gametophyte populations of several fern species exist beyond the distributional range of the sporophyte generation (see Rumsey and Sheffield, 1996
, and references therein). This observation and the present results indicate that other gametophytic or sporophytic fitness components following germination are more important in determining the competitive balance between polyploids and related diploids.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank Dr A. Dyer for insightful comments on the manuscript and linguistic advice, B. Pías for help with spore collection, and Dr B. Dove for useful information on his program ImageTool. We are also grateful to Dr E. Sheffield and an anonymous referee for suggestions which greatly improved the manuscript. This research was supported by University Rey Juan Carlos Project PPR-2004-53.
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