MATERNAL EFFECTS AT FOUR LEVELS IN SENECIO VULGARIS (ASTERACEAE) GROWN ON A SOIL NUTRIENT GRADIENT

Abstract
Plants of Senecio vulgaris L. were grown individually within pots to examine effects of maternal soil nutrient level on offspring. Genotypic variability among maternal plants was minimized by using only maternal plants derived from seed of a single inbred line. Significant (P < 0.05) maternal effects of the nutrient gradient were detected at four different levels. Maternal plants grown in lower soil nutrients produced: 1) seeds with lower individual mass; 2) seeds that germinated later; 3) seedling offspring that grew into smaller juvenile plants in nutrient‐impoverished soil; and 4) seedling offspring that survived longer in the absence of external nutrients. This last type of maternal effect is reported for the first time in the present study. These data suggest that a compensatory effect of relatively low maternal soil nutrient level may be conferred on the plant's offspring in the form of a “wait and tolerate” strategy through a longer “seedling dormancy” period. This appears to involve a high seedling tolerance threshold level for external nutrient deprivation. To account for these results, we propose two hypotheses based on two different causes of nutrient deprivation, and based on the assumption that if maternal plants experience nutrient deprivation, seedling offspring have a high probability of also experiencing the same cause of nutrient deprivation: 1) Under the “nutrient supply hypothesis,” the wait and tolerate strategy in seedling offspring represents an adaptation to selection factors associated with nutrient deprivation resulting from a low nutrient‐supplying power of the environment. 2) Under the “nutrient‐depletion hypothesis,” this strategy represents an adaptation to selection factors associated with nutrient depletion by neighbors.
Funding Information
  • Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada