Open Access
Short‐term physiological plasticity: Trade‐off between drought and recovery responses in three Mediterranean Cistus species
Author(s) -
Puglielli Giacomo,
Catoni Rosangela,
Spoletini Alessandra,
Varone Laura,
Gratani Loretta
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
ecology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.17
H-Index - 63
ISSN - 2045-7758
DOI - 10.1002/ece3.3484
Subject(s) - biology , phenotypic plasticity , mediterranean climate , context (archaeology) , botany , plasticity , ecology , physics , thermodynamics , paleontology
Abstract Short‐term physiological plasticity allows plants to thrive in highly variable environments such as the Mediterranean ecosystems. In such context, plants that maximize physiological performance under favorable conditions, such as Cistus spp., are generally reported to have a great cost in terms of plasticity (i.e., a high short‐term physiological plasticity) due to the severe reduction of physiological performance when stress factors occur. However, Cistus spp. also show a noticeable resilience ability in response to stress factors. We hypothesized that in Cistus species the short‐term physiological response to stress and that to subsequent recovery can show a positive trade‐off to offset the costs of the photosynthetic decline under drought. Gas exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence, and water relations were measured in C. salvifolius , C. monspeliensis, and C. creticus subsp . eriocephalus during an imposed experimental drought and subsequent recovery. Plants were grown outdoor in common garden conditions from seeds of different provenances. The short‐term physiological response to stress and that to recovery were quantified via phenotypic plasticity index (PI stress and PI recovery , respectively). A linear regression analysis was used to identify the hypothesized trade‐off PI stress –PI recovery . Accordingly, we found a positive trade‐off between PI stress and PI recovery, which was consistent across species and provenances. This result contributes in explaining the profit, more than the cost, of a higher physiological plasticity in response to short‐term stress imposition for Cistus spp because the costs of a higher PI stress are payed back by an as much higher PI recovery . The absence of leaf shedding during short‐term drought supports this view. The trade‐off well described the relative variations of gas exchange and water relation parameters. Moreover, the results were in accordance with the ecology of this species and provide the first evidence of a consistent trade‐off between the short‐term physiological responses to drought and recovery phases in Mediterranean species.