Flood induced phenotypic plasticity in amphibious genus Elatine (Elatinaceae)

PeerJ. 2015 Dec 10:3:e1473. doi: 10.7717/peerj.1473. eCollection 2015.

Abstract

Vegetative characters are widely used in the taxonomy of the amphibious genus Elatine L. However, these usually show great variation not just between species but between their aquatic and terrestrial forms. In the present study we examine the variation of seed and vegetative characters in nine Elatine species (E. brachysperma, E. californica, E. gussonei, E. hexandra, E. hungarica, E. hydropiper, E. macropoda, E. orthosperma and E. triandra) to reveal the extension of plasticity induced by the amphibious environment, and to test character reliability for species identification. Cultivated plant clones were kept under controlled conditions exposed to either aquatic or terrestrial environmental conditions. Six vegetative characters (length of stem, length of internodium, length of lamina, width of lamina, length of petioles, length of pedicel) and four seed characters (curvature, number of pits / lateral row, 1st and 2nd dimension) were measured on 50 fruiting stems of the aquatic and on 50 stems of the terrestrial form of the same clone. MDA, NPMANOVA Random Forest classification and cluster analysis were used to unravel the morphological differences between aquatic and terrestrial forms. The results of MDA cross-validated and Random Forest classification clearly indicated that only seed traits are stable within species (i.e., different forms of the same species keep similar morphology). Consequently, only seed morphology is valuable for taxonomic purposes since vegetative traits are highly influenced by environmental factors.

Keywords: Adaptation; Cultivation experiments; Macrophyte; Morphological variability; Seed characters; Seed-morphology; Vegetative characteristics; Water depth; Wetland ephemerophytes.

Grants and funding

This research was supported by the European Union and the State of Hungary, co-financed by the European Social Fund in the framework of TÁMOP-4.2.4.A/2-11/1-2012-0001 ‘National Excellence Program’ and TÁMOP-4.2.2B-15/1/KONV-2015-0001 program. Instrumental and infrastructural supports of the OTKA K108992 and OTKA PD109686 Grants and National Science Center (Poland) N N303 470638 Grant (AP) are also highly appreciated, and was a Bolyai Fellowship (GS) from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.