J Plant Ecol ›› 2021, Vol. 14 ›› Issue (5): 911-919 .DOI: 10.1093/jpe/rtab042

• Research Articles • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Evolution of herbs: key to the conundrum might be tolerance not avoidance

Adam Klimeš1,2, *, Martin Weiser1, Tomáš Koubek1 and Tomáš Herben1,3   

  1. 1 Department of Botany, Faculty of Science, Charles University, Benátská 2, 128 01 Prague, Czech Republic, 2 Department of Functional Ecology, Institute of Botany, Czech Academy of Sciences, Dukelská 135, 379 01 Třeboň, Czech Republic, 3 Department of Population Ecology, Institute of Botany, Czech Academy of Sciences, Zámek 1, 252 43 Průhonice, Czech Republic

    *Corresponding author. E-mail: adamklimes3@gmail.com
  • Received:2020-10-24 Revised:2021-01-16 Accepted:2021-04-03 Online:2021-04-24 Published:2021-10-01

Abstract:

Aims

Woody plants represent the ancestral growth form in angiosperms with herbs evolving repeatedly from them. While there are a number of hypotheses about drivers of the evolution of the herbaceous habit, the ability to avoid frost damage in winter by discarding their aboveground biomass has often been invoked as the main force in their evolution. We propose instead that any unpredictable disturbance might have been much more important than the seasonal frost, as herbs easily survive repeated disturbance.

Methods

We tested this hypothesis by comparing herbs and woody plants in their ability to deal with three types of simulated disturbances, more predictable winter freezing, less predictable spring freezing and herbivory. Comparison was made in an experimental common garden setup with 20 species differing in woodiness. We evaluated the effects of these disturbances on mortality and regrowth of plants.

Important Findings

Herbs did not have an advantage over woody plants in survival when exposed to winter freezing. In less predictable conditions of spring freezing herbs survived the treatment better than woody plants and this advantage was even larger in case of the simulated herbivory treatment. The advantage of herbs over woody plants in less predictable conditions suggests that herbaceous growth form might be an adaptation to unpredictable disturbance, which herbs are able to tolerate thanks to their ability to survive loss of aboveground biomass. Consequently, factors such as mammal herbivory or fire might have been the most likely factors in the transition from woody species to herbs.

Key words: common garden experiment, herbivory, predictability, spring freezing, winter freezing

摘要:
草本植物的进化:解决难题的关键在于忍耐而非逃避
木本植物延续了其祖先被子植物的生长形态,而草本植物则不断地从中进化演变。虽然关于驱动草本植物习性进化的因素已有许多假设,但是通过舍弃地上生物质从而避免冬季冻害的能力常常被认为是促使其进化的主要力量。然而,鉴于草本植物在反复干扰中依旧能够轻松存活,我们提出了不可预测的干扰可能比季节性霜冻更为重要的假设。我们通过比较草本植物和木本植物应对3种模拟干扰(容易预测的冬季冰冻、不易预测的春季冰冻和食草作用)的能力来验证这一假设。通过比较20种不同植物在同质园实验中的表现,我们评估了这些干扰对植物死亡和再生方面的影响。研究结果表明,在冬季冰冻条件下,比起木本植物,草本植物在存活率上并没有优势。在不易预测的春季冰冻条件下,草本植物比木本植物的存活率更高。而在模拟食草作用的条件下,草本植物的这种生存优势更大。在不可预测的条件下,草本植物相较于木本植物的生存优势表明,草本植物的生长形式可能是对不可预测的干扰的适应,这种逆境忍耐通过其损失地上生物质也能够生存的能力得以实现。因此,哺乳动物的食草行为或火灾等原因或许最有可能是木本植物向草本植物过渡的因素。

关键词: 同质园实验, 食草作用, 预测性, 春季冰冻, 冬季冰冻