
The earth is experiencing major changes in global and regional climates and changes are predicted to accelerate in the future. Many species will be under considerable pressure to evolve, to migrate, or be faced with extinction. Clonal plants would appear to be at a particular disadvantage due to their limited mobility and limited capacity for adaptation. However, they have outlived previous environmental shifts and clonal species have persisted for millenia. Clonal spread offers unique ecological advantages, such as resource sharing, risk sharing, and economies of scale among ramets within genotypes. We suggest that ecological attributes of clonal plants, in tandem with variation in gene regulation through epigenetic mechanisms that facilitate and optimize phenotype variation in response to environmental change may permit them to be well suited to projected conditions.
Plasticity, Ecology, Evolution, Clonal plants, clonal plants, epigenetic variation, Climate acclimation, plasticity, Epigenetic variation, Environmental Science, QH359-425, transgenerational, Transgenerational, climate acclimation, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, QH540-549.5
Plasticity, Ecology, Evolution, Clonal plants, clonal plants, epigenetic variation, Climate acclimation, plasticity, Epigenetic variation, Environmental Science, QH359-425, transgenerational, Transgenerational, climate acclimation, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, QH540-549.5
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| influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | Top 10% | |
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