Sensitivity to long days for flowering is reduced in Arabidopsis by
yearly variation in growing season temperatures
Abstract
Conservative flowering behaviors, such as flowering during long days in
summer or late flowering at a high leaf number, are often proposed to
protect against variable winter and spring temperatures which lead to
frost damage if premature flowering occurs. Yet, due the many factors in
natural environments relative to the number of individuals compared,
assessing which climate characteristics drive these flowering traits has
been difficult. We applied a multidisciplinary approach to ten
winter-annual Arabidopsis thaliana populations originating along
a wide climactic gradient in Norway. We used a variable reduction
strategy to assess which of 100 climate descriptors from their home
sites correlated most to their behaviors when grown in common garden and
assessed sequence variation of 19 known environmental-response flowering
genes. Photoperiod sensitivity inversely correlated with interannual
variation in timing of growing season onset (start of favorable spring
temperatures). Time to flowering appeared driven by growing season
length, curtailed by cold fall temperatures. The distribution of
FLM, TFL2, and HOS1 haplotypes, genes involved in
ambient temperature response, correlated with growing-season climate. We
show that long-day sensitivity and late flowering may be driven not by
risk of spring frosts, but by growing season temperature and length
perhaps to opportunistically maximize growth.