2021
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-021-05030-6
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Altitude and latitude have different effects on population characteristics of the widespread plant Anthyllis vulneraria

Abstract: Widespread plants may provide natural models for how population processes change with temperature and other environmental variables and how they may respond to global change. Similar changes in temperature can occur along altitudinal and latitudinal gradients, but hardly any study has compared the effects of the two types of gradients. We studied populations of Anthyllis vulneraria along a latitudinal gradient from Central Europe to the range limit in the North and an altitudinal gradient in the Alps from 500 … Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 74 publications
(101 reference statements)
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“…However, the ACM assumes that the lower genetic diversity and stronger differentiation among peripheral populations is due to less favorable conditions, which lead to smaller and more isolated populations and subsequently to genetic erosion and strong differentiation (Eckert et al, 2008 ; Hardie & Hutchings, 2010 ; Sexton et al, 2009 ). In contrast, in A. vulneraria the size of populations increased with latitude indicating favorable conditions in the north (Daco et al, 2021 ), and genetic variation was not related to current population size. This suggest that not current conditions resulting in fragmentation, but historical processes (colonization after the ice age) are responsible for the much lower genetic diversity of northern populations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, the ACM assumes that the lower genetic diversity and stronger differentiation among peripheral populations is due to less favorable conditions, which lead to smaller and more isolated populations and subsequently to genetic erosion and strong differentiation (Eckert et al, 2008 ; Hardie & Hutchings, 2010 ; Sexton et al, 2009 ). In contrast, in A. vulneraria the size of populations increased with latitude indicating favorable conditions in the north (Daco et al, 2021 ), and genetic variation was not related to current population size. This suggest that not current conditions resulting in fragmentation, but historical processes (colonization after the ice age) are responsible for the much lower genetic diversity of northern populations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is in contrast to the predictions of the ACM that genetic erosion in small populations would lead to reduced genetic diversity in high elevation populations. However, in A. vulneraria the size of populations actually increased with elevation in the Alps (Daco et al, 2021 ) and one might thus have even expected an increase of genetic diversity with elevation, but no relationship was found. No change of genetic diversity with elevation has also been found in several other studies (Pluess & Stöcklin, 2004 ; see review of Hahn et al ( 2012 ) and Ohsawa & Ide ( 2008 )).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Perfect ‘compensation’ of some vital rates can yield stable population size at marginal populations. Even if imperfect, compensation may reduce overall variation in λ across the species’ range (Daco et al, 2021; Oldfather & Ackerly, 2019) or over time (Andrello et al, 2020; Compagnoni et al, 2016), potentially allowing populations to persist at low latitudinal or elevational edges of a species’ range. Nevertheless, several recent studies have challenged the view that demographic compensation rescues marginal populations (Sheth & Angert, 2018) due to negligible (Dibner et al, 2019; Reed et al, 2021) or even negative (Oldfather et al, 2021) effects on λ.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%