Physiological traits contribute to growth and adaptation of Mexican maize landraces

PLoS One. 2024 Feb 1;19(2):e0290815. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0290815. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Local adaptation of populations results from an interplay between their environment and genetics. If functional trait variation influences plant performance, populations can adapt to their local environment. However, populations may also respond plastically to environmental challenges, altering phenotype without shifting allele frequencies. The level of local adaptation in crop landraces and their capacity for plasticity in response to environmental change may predict their continued utility to farmers facing climate change. Yet we understand little about how physiological traits potentially underlying local adaptation of cultivars influence fitness. Farmers in Mexico-the crop center of origin for maize-manage and rely upon a high diversity of landraces. We studied maize grown in Chiapas, Mexico, where strong elevational gradients cover a relatively small geographic area. We reciprocally transplanted 12 populations sourced from three elevational zones (600, 1550 and 2150 m) back into those elevations for two years using a modified split-split plot design to model effects of environment, genetics, and their interaction. We studied physiological and growth traits, including photosynthetic rate, stomatal conductance, stomatal density, relative growth rate (RGR), and seed production. Maize fitness showed indications of local adaptation with highland and midland types performing poorly at warmer lowland locations, though patterns depended on the year. Several physiological traits, including stomatal conductance, were affected by G x E interactions, some of which indicated non-adaptive plastic responses with potential fitness implications. We discerned a significant positive relationship between fitness and relative growth rate. Growth rates in highland landraces were outperformed by midland and lowland landraces grown in high temperature, lowland garden. Lowland landrace stomatal conductance was diminished compared to that of highland landraces in the cooler highland garden. Thus, both adaptive and non-adaptive physiological responses of maize landraces in southern Mexico may have implications for fitness, as well as responses to climate change.

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Physiological / genetics
  • Environment*
  • Mexico
  • Phenotype
  • Photosynthesis
  • Zea mays* / genetics

Grants and funding

National Geographic Committee on Research and Exploration Grant (GRANT #9178-12) to KLM and HRP; Tinker Travel grant from the Center for Latin American Studies at Ohio State University to BP. Salaries and research support were also provided by state and federal funds appropriated to the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, Ohio State University through a Competitive Research Grant (OHOA1444) to KLM and HRP and via manuscript no. HCS21‐14. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.