Microgeographic local adaptation and species distributions: the role of
selective processes on early life history traits in the Symphonia
syngameon.
Abstract
1. Trees are characterised by the large number of seeds they produce.
Although most of those seeds will never germinate, plenty will. Of those
which germinate, many die young, and eventually only a minute fraction
will grow to adult stage and reproduce. Is this just a random process?
Do variations in germination and survival at very young stages rely on
variations in adaptations to microgeographic heterogeneity? and do these
processes matter at all in determining tree species distribution and
abundance? 2. We have studied these questions with the Neotropical
Symphonia syngameon. In the Guiana shield, Symphonia are represented by
at least two sympatric taxa or ecotypes, Symphonia globulifera found
almost exclusively in bottomlands, and a yet undescribed more generalist
taxon/ecotype, Symphonia sp1. A reciprocal transplantation experiment
(510 seeds, 16 conditions) was set-up and followed over the course of 6
years to evaluate the survival and performance of individuals from
different ecotypes and provenances. 3. Germination, survival, growth,
and herbivory showed signs of local adaptation, with some combinations
of ecotypes and provenances growing faster and surviving better in their
own habitat or provenance region. S. globulifera was strongly penalised
when planted outside its home habitat but showed the fastest growth
rates when planted in its home habitat, suggesting it’s a specialist of
a high-risk high-gain strategy. Conversely, S. sp1 behaved as a
generalist, performing well in a variety of environments. 4. Synthesis:
The differential performance of seeds and seedlings in the different
habitats matches the known distribution of both ecotypes, indicating
that environmental filtering at the very early stages can be a key
determinant of tree species distributions, even at the microgeographic
level and among very closely related taxa. Furthermore, such
differential performance also contributes to explain, in part, the
maintenance of the different ecotypes in the Symphonia syngameon living
in intimate sympatry despite occasional gene flow.