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1.
How much of the variation seen in life histories is consistent with adaptive hypotheses, and how much requires other kinds of explanation? Differences in flowering time between Sonoran (earlier flowering) and Chihuahuan Desert (later flowering) populations of the desert annual Eriogonum abertianum Torr. (Polygonaceae) are significant, repeatable between greenhouse experiments, and persist into a second greenhouse generation. These apparent genetic differences are consistent with a hypothesis of local adaptation: field demographic studies (Fox, 1989b) show that many fewer Sonoran than Chihuahuan Desert plants survive to the summer rainy season, suggesting selection for earlier flowering in the Sonoran Desert. Within natural populations there is considerable phenological complexity: time of first flowering varies by up to six months, and individuals may have zero, one, or several reproductive episodes. Greenhouse sib analyses revealed only marginal among-family genetic variation for flowering size. The resemblance between parents and offspring for size and time of flowering varied with growth conditions, suggesting that this marginal variation among families may be at least partly due to factors other than additive genetic variance. On the other hand, moisture limitation significantly delayed the onset of flowering in two independent experiments. Variation in moisture availability in both time and space is characteristic of desert environments. The phenological complexity in natural populations may thus be generated by random variation in moisture availability, possibly in conjunction with variation in germination date and plant size. The results call into question the claim that drought generally induces flowering in desert annuals.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract: We genotyped 180 captive desert tortoises (Gopherus agassizii) from Kingman (n = 45), Phoenix (n = 113), and Tucson (n = 22), Arizona, USA, to determine if the genetic lineage of captives is associated with that of wild tortoises in the local area (Sonoran Desert). We tested all samples for 16 short tandem repeats and sequenced 1,109 base pairs of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). To determine genetic origin, we performed assignment tests against a reference database of 997 desert tortoise samples collected throughout the Mojave and Sonoran Deserts. We found that >40% of our Arizona captive samples were genetically of Mojave Desert or hybrid origin, with the percentage of individuals exhibiting the Mojave genotype increasing as the sample locations approached the California, USA, border. In Phoenix, 11.5% were Sonoran–Mojave crosses, and 8.8% were hybrids between desert tortoise and Texas tortoise (G. berlandieri). Our findings present many potential implications for wild tortoises in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona. Escaped or released captive tortoises with Mojave or hybrid genotypes have the potential to affect the genetic composition of Sonoran wild populations. Genotyping captive desert tortoises could be used to inform the adoption process, and thereby provide additional protection to native desert-tortoise populations in Arizona.  相似文献   

3.
  • 1 A classic biogeographic pattern is the alignment of diploid, tetraploid and hexaploid races of creosote bush (Larrea tridentata) across the Chihuahuan, Sonoran and Mohave Deserts of western North America. We used statistically robust differences in guard cell size of modern plants and fossil leaves from packrat middens to map current and past distributions of these ploidy races since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM).
  • 2 Glacial/early Holocene (26–10 14C kyr bp or thousands of radiocarbon years before present) populations included diploids along the lower Rio Grande of west Texas, 650 km removed from sympatric diploids and tetraploids in the lower Colorado River Basin of south‐eastern California/south‐western Arizona. Diploids migrated slowly from lower Rio Grande refugia with expansion into the northern Chihuahuan Desert sites forestalled until after ~4.0 14C kyr bp . Tetraploids expanded from the lower Colorado River Basin into the northern limits of the Sonoran Desert in central Arizona by 6.4 14C kyr bp . Hexaploids appeared by 8.5 14C kyr bp in the lower Colorado River Basin, reaching their northernmost limits (~37°N) in the Mohave Desert between 5.6 and 3.9 14C kyr bp .
  • 3 Modern diploid isolates may have resulted from both vicariant and dispersal events. In central Baja California and the lower Colorado River Basin, modern diploids probably originated from relict populations near glacial refugia. Founder events in the middle and late Holocene established diploid outposts on isolated limestone outcrops in areas of central and southern Arizona dominated by tetraploid populations.
  • 4 Geographic alignment of the three ploidy races along the modern gradient of increasingly drier and hotter summers is clearly a postglacial phenomenon, but evolution of both higher ploidy races must have happened before the Holocene. The exact timing and mechanism of polyploidy evolution in creosote bush remains a matter of conjecture.
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4.
Biological soil crusts are diverse assemblages of bacteria, cyanobacteria, algae, fungi, lichens, and mosses that cover much of arid land soils. The objective of this study was to quantify protozoa associated with biological soil crusts and test the response of protozoa to increased temperature and precipitation as is predicted by some global climate models. Protozoa were more abundant when associated with cyanobacteria/lichen crusts than with cyanobacteria crusts alone. Amoebae, flagellates, and ciliates originating from the Colorado Plateau desert (cool desert, primarily winter precipitation) declined 50-, 10-, and 100-fold, respectively, when moved in field mesocosms to the Chihuahuan Desert (hot desert, primarily summer rain). However, this was not observed in protozoa collected from the Chihuahuan Desert and moved to the Sonoran desert (hot desert, also summer rain, but warmer than Chihuahuan Desert). Protozoa in culture began to encyst at 37 degrees C. Cysts survived the upper end of daily temperatures (37-55 degrees C), and could be stimulated to excyst if temperatures were reduced to 15 degrees C or lower. Results from this study suggest that cool desert protozoa are influenced negatively by increased summer precipitation during excessive summer temperatures, and that desert protozoa may be adapted to a specific desert's temperature and precipitation regime.  相似文献   

5.
Reproductive physiology in Syringodium filiforme Kütz. is controlled primarily by temperature under day lengths ranging from 12 hr to continuous light. Texas plants can be induced to flower at temperatures ranging from 20 to 24 C, but southern Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean plants are most readily induced at 23–24 C. Texas plants proceed to anthesis at temperatures above 22 C, but St. Croix plants require higher temperatures, above 25 C, for emergence of flowers from the bracts. Flowers induced under continuous light proceed to anthesis under day lengths shortened to 11 hr, but further floral induction is inhibited even under inductive temperatures. In natural seagrass beds, flowering occurs primarily under lengthening day lengths and warming temperatures that follow winter minima, but inflorescences may occur at other times of the year if temperatures permit.  相似文献   

6.
Photoperiodic responses of Xanthium strumarium L. originating between 19° N in Mexico and 34° N in Texas varied among seedlings grown from seed under controlled conditions. The critical night lengths form a gradient from 9.5 hr in northern Texas to 10.75 hr in southern Texas and northeastern Mexico. Populations with critical night lengths of 9.5 and 9.75 hr showed a longer interval to flower bud formation under cooler temperatures (24 C day/15 C night) than under warmer temperatures (30 C day/24 C night). Three of four populations with a 10.75-hr critical night length showed a shorter interval under the cooler temperature regime. Although the Texas populations demonstrate a strong correlation of photoperiodic response with latitude, the Mexico populations show diverse photoperiodic timing from approximately the same latitude. The study emphasizes that a combination of critical night length and ripeness-to-flower (maturity) response forms the basis for reproductive adaptation in different climatic regimes in Texas and Mexico.  相似文献   

7.
Setchellanthus caeruleus, which has disjunct populations in the north of the Chihuahuan Desert and in the Tehuacán-Cuicatlán valley, was selected to understand the evolutionary history of plants in this desert and its southerly relicts. This species constitutes the monotypic family Setchellanthaceae, which forms part of a group of plants that produce mustard-oil glucosides or glucosinolates. Molecular phylogenetic analyses based on DNA plastid sequences of plants of S. caeruleus from both areas, including representative taxa of the order Brassicales, were carried out to estimate the time of origin of the family (based on matK?+?rcbL) and divergence of populations (based on psbI-K, trnh-psbA, trnL-trnF). In addition, comparative ecological niche modelling was performed to detect if climate variables vary significantly in northern and southern populations. Analyses revealed that Setchellanthaceae is an ancient lineage that originated between 78 and 112 Mya during the mid-late Cretaceous—much earlier than the formation of the Chihuahuan Desert. The molecular data matrix displayed a few indel events as the only differences of plastid DNA sequences between northern and southern populations. It is suggested that due to climate changes in this desert in the Pliocene, populations of Setchellanthus remained in the Sierra de Jimulco and in Cuicatlán, in climatically stable locations. Ecological niche models of northern populations predict niches of southern populations and identity niche tests indicate that there are no differences in their ecological niches.  相似文献   

8.
ABSTRACT The distribution of desert tortoises (Gopherus agassizii) spans a wide range of biotic and abiotic conditions in the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico, with physical and behavioral differences distinguishing tortoises inhabiting the Mojave Desert from those inhabiting the Sonoran Desert. Relative to tortoise populations in the Mojave Desert, populations in the Sonoran Desert have not been well-studied. To assess how habitat use of desert tortoises in the Sonoran Desert was influenced by topography, vegetation, geomorphology, and soil, we surveyed 40 randomly located 3-ha sites for presence of adult tortoises within a site-occupancy framework. We modeled both occupancy and detection probability as a function of environmental features, and compared those results with a logistic regression model that assumed detection probability was equal to 1. Results from both approaches agreed, suggesting that habitat selection of tortoises in the Sonoran Desert was influenced primarily by topographic and geomorphologic features rather than by vegetation. Specifically, tortoises were more likely to occupy sites that were steep (we detected tortoises on 29% of sites with mean slope <5° and 92% of sites with mean slope >15°) and predominantly east-facing (53% of sites with <5% of site facing E and 92% of sites with >20% facing E), and less likely to occupy north-facing slopes (100% of sites with <10% of site facing N and 14% of sites with >60% facing N). Our results contrast with patterns of habitat use in the Mojave Desert where tortoises primarily occupy valley bottoms. Habitat use of tortoises in Sonoran and Mojave Desert populations differ considerably, contributing to the mounting body of evidence suggesting that these geographically distinct populations may represent separate species.  相似文献   

9.
The broad distribution of the Sceloporus magister species group (squamata: phrynosomatidae) throughout western North America provides an appropriate model for testing biogeographical hypotheses explaining the timing and origins of diversity across mainland deserts and the Baja California Peninsula. We inferred concordant phylogenetic trees describing the higher-level relationships within the magister group using 1.6 kb of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and 1.7 kb of nuclear DNA data. These data provide strong support for the parallel divergence of lineages endemic to the Baja California Peninsula (S. zosteromus and the orcutti complex) in the form of two sequential divergence events at the base of the magister group phylogeny. A relaxed phylogenetic analysis of the mtDNA data using one fossil and one biogeographical constraint provides a chronology of these divergence events and evidence that further diversification within the Baja California clades occurred simultaneously, although patterns of geographical variation and speciation between clades differ. We resolved four major phylogeographical clades within S. magister that (i) provide a novel phylogenetic placement of the Chihuahuan Desert populations sister to the Mojave Desert; (ii) illustrate a mixed history for the Colorado Plateau that includes Mojave and Sonoran Desert components; and (iii) identify an area of overlap between the Mojave and Sonoran Desert clades near Yuma, Arizona. Estimates of bidirectional migration rates among populations of S. magister using four nuclear loci support strong asymmetries in gene flow among the major mtDNA clades. Based on the nonexclusivity of mtDNA haplotypes, nuclear gene flow among populations and wide zones of phenotypic intergradation, S. magister appears to represent a single geographically variable and widespread species.  相似文献   

10.
Racial differences based on flowering response to several photoperiods were detectable in two widely separated populations of white snakeroot, Eupatorium rugosum Houtt. The most favorable photoperiod for advanced flowering in Georgia stocks was 12 hr, for those from North Dakota, 14 hr. The difference in latitude between these populations was approximately 12° and represents a mean difference of 75 days in the frost-free season. Under noninductive photoperiod a 1-hr interruption of white light in the middle of 15 hr of darkness stimulated floral initiation in North Dakota plants, whereas the same application at the beginning or at the end of the dark period failed to produce flower buds. The effect of red light (660 mμ) for 10 min given in the middle of the long night was similar to white light on the northern strain, and was negated by far-red (730 mμ). Georgia stocks initiated flowering under 15 hr of darkness but were retarded by white light applied in the middle of the period, thus differing in basic response from North Dakota plants. Red light, in contrast to effects observed in North Dakota plants, retarded initiation of flower buds. This effect was offset by far-red light. When compared with other studies on long-day and short-day species our results suggest that photoperiodic adaptations related to latitudinal distribution occur in white snakeroot. The North Dakota strain showed correspondence to long-day types while short-day tendencies were exhibited by Georgia plants.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract: Effective conservation requires strategies to monitor populations efficiently, which can be especially difficult for rare or elusive species where field surveys require high effort and considerable cost. Populations of many reptiles, including Sonoran desert tortoises (Gopherus agassizii), are challenging to monitor effectively because they are cryptic, they occur at low densities, and their activity is limited both seasonally and daily. We compared efficiency and statistical power of 2 survey methods appropriate for tortoises and other rare vertebrates, line-transect distance sampling and site occupancy. In 2005 and 2006 combined, we surveyed 120 1-km transects to estimate density and 40 3-ha plots 5 times each to estimate occupancy of Sonoran desert tortoises in 2 mountain ranges in southern Arizona, USA. For both mountain ranges combined, we estimated density to be 0.30 adult tortoises/ha (95% CI = 0.17–0.43) and occupancy to be 0.72 (95% CI = 0.56–0.89). For the sampling designs we evaluated, monitoring efforts based on occupancy were 8–36% more efficient than those based on density, when contrasting only survey effort, and 17–30% more efficient when contrasting total effort (surveying, hiking to and from survey locations, and radiotracking). Occupancy had greater statistical power to detect annual declines in the proportion of area occupied than did distance sampling to detect annual declines in density. For example, we estimated that power to detect a 5% annual decline with 10 years of annual sampling was 0.92 (95% CI = 0.75–0.98) for occupancy and 0.43 (95% CI = 0.35–0.52) for distance sampling. Although all sampling methods have limitations, occupancy estimation offers a promising alternative for monitoring populations of rare vertebrates, including tortoises in the Sonoran Desert.  相似文献   

12.
Responses to photoperiod and temperature were compared for hybrids between Asiatic plants in the indigenous strumarium morphological complex and plants in five American complexes: oviforme, italicum, chinense, cavanillesii, and pennsylvancium. The F1 hybrids between Hong Kong plants and various American plants showed intermediacy in photoperiodic response; however, the hybrid night requirement was more similar to that of the American parent. The Hong Kong plants are difficult to evaluate photoperiodically but showed a night length requirement of 9.25–9.50 hr. Day-neutral plants from India in the strumarium complex produced day-neutral F1 hybrids in crosses with most American plants having night requirements less than 10 hr. The F1 hybrids involving the day-neutral Indian plants and either Indian or Australian chinense plants showed a night requirement of 8.25–8.75 hr. The chinense parental plants had apparent critical nights of 10.25–10.50 hr. Crosses between the day-neutral Indian plants and Mexican plants with apparent critical nights of 10.75–11 hr produced F1 hybrids requiring nights of 8.75–9.00 hr. The various hybrids tended to show the broader temperature tolerances of the American parents. The ripeness-to-flower (maturity) responses of seedlings tended to show the genetic controls of the parent with the faster developmental rate. The hybridization evidence suggests that photoperiodic responses are quantitatively controlled and inherited independently of morphology and ripeness-to-flower responses. The populations of India are highly diverse and probably reflect recombinations of photoperiodic and temperature responses between indigenous day-neutral plants and photoperiodic chinense plants introduced from North America.  相似文献   

13.
ABSTRACT Recently, a conservation strategy developed to restore populations of black-tailed prairie dog (Cynomys ludovicianus) suggested reintroducing animals into the Chihuahuan Desert grasslands of the southwestern United States. Rainfall in desert habitats is lower and more variable compared to rainfall near the center of the prairie dog's range. Additionally, peak rainfall comes months after prairie dogs reproduce in these desert systems. Thus, southwestern populations may be less prolific and fluctuate more than those found in northerly climes. Using mark-recapture and mark-resight techniques, we estimated reproduction and monthly survival from 577 individuals inhabiting 6 reintroduced colonies from 2003 to 2005 in the northern Chihuahuan Desert. During 2003 precipitation was 64% of the long-term average, whereas both 2004 and 2005 had near-average precipitation. Probability that a female became pregnant, number of juvenile prairie dogs emerging from maternity burrows, and date of emergence were all correlated to adult female body mass. Adult monthly survival decreased from >0.95 during spring to 0.70 in summer 2003, following a rapid loss in adult body mass that coincided with low precipitation. In 2003 monthly juvenile survival was near zero on 2 of the 3 largest colonies and growth rates of juveniles were half that of subsequent years. Estimated population size declined by 68% (range = 18–91%) from 2003 to 2004, and 5 of 6 populations declined an average of 75% from their original introduction size. Prairie dog populations in desert environs may have a high risk of extirpation caused by weather patterns indicative of desert climates. Our results are important for those managers involved in the conservation of prairie dogs and we suggest that regional differences should be carefully considered prior to any reintroduction effort.  相似文献   

14.
Aerobic bacteria were collected from three free-ranging desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii) populations in the eastern Mojave Desert (Arizona, Utah; USA) from 1989 to 1993, and from two free-ranging populations in the central Sonoran Desert (Arizona, USA) from 1990 to 1994. Six species of nasal bacteria and 18 species of cloacal bacteria were identified. At least one potential pathogen was found in the nasal cavity (Pasteurella testudinis), and at least two potential pathogens in the cloaca (Pseudomonas spp., Salmonella spp.).  相似文献   

15.
In the Sonoran Desert of North America, populations of the desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii) occur in rocky foothills throughout southwestern Arizona and northwestern Mexico. Although tortoise populations appear to be isolated from each other by low desert valleys, individuals occasionally move long distances between populations. Increasingly, these movements are hindered by habitat fragmentation due to anthropogenic landscape changes. We used molecular techniques and radiotelemetry to examine movement patterns of desert tortoises in southern Arizona. We collected blood samples from 170 individuals in nine mountain ranges and analyzed variability in seven microsatellite loci to determine genetic differentiation among populations. Gene flow estimates between populations indicate that populations exchanged individuals historically at a rate greater than one migrant per generation, and positive correlation between genetic and geographic distance of population pairs suggests that the limiting factor for gene flow among populations is isolation by distance. Life history traits of the desert tortoise, a long-lived species with delayed sexual maturity, may severely constrain the ability of small populations to respond to disturbances that increase adult mortality. Historic gene flow estimates among populations suggests that recovery of declining populations may rely heavily on the immigration of new individuals from adjacent mountain ranges. Management strategies compatible with the evolutionary history of gene flow among disjunct populations will help ensure the long-term persistence of Sonoran desert tortoise populations.  相似文献   

16.
Groups of photorefractory female subtropical house sparrows, Passer domestkus, when treated with 6 weeks of a short photocycle (8L : 16D) showed significant ovarian growth on their return to a long photocycle (15L :9D). A 6-hr photophase coupled with scotophase of varying durations does not terminate the refractory period under photoperiod cycles of 12 (6L : 6D), 36 (6L :30D) and 60 (6L : S4D) hr but the refractory period is terminated by light-dark cycles of 24 (6L: 18D), 48 (6L :42D) and 72 (6L : 66D) hr. These results are consistent with the Biinning hypothesis of coincidence between endogenous photosensitive rhythmicity and environmental photoperiod timing that an endogenous circadian rhythm is involved in the maintenance and termination of photorefractoriness.  相似文献   

17.
The desert plant Zygophyllum dumosum displays unique epigenetic constraints, not found in other perennial desert plants, namely, it possesses mono- but not di- and tri-methylated histone H3 at lysine 9 (H3K9). We investigated the proposal that lack of dimethylated H3K9 (H3K9me2) is not restricted to Z. dumosum, but a feature uniquely evolved in the Zygophyllaceae. To this end, we analyzed the state of H3K9me2 in various species including Z. simplex (annual), Peganum harmala (hemicryptophyte), Nitraria retusa (shrub) and Balanites aegyptiaca (tree) from the Negev Desert (Israel) and Larrea tridentata (creosote bush), a prominent species in the Mojave, Sonoran, and Chihuahuan Deserts of western North America. All but one of these plants showed dimethylation of H3 at lysine 4 (H3K4me2), but no detectable levels of H3K9me2. The exception was Nitraria retusa, recently separated from the Zygophyllaceae family, which possesses H3K9me2, further supporting its partition into a distinct family (Nitrariaceae). Interestingly, the analysis of Krameria cistoidea (Krameriaceae), which is listed under the Zygophyllales, showed the presence of H3K9me2. It appears that lack of H3K9me2 has uniquely evolved in the Zygophyllaceae (sensu stricto), suggesting that this phenomenon has a strong genetic background. Thus, epigenetic information revealed for Zygophyllaceae can be useful to phylogenetic approaches.  相似文献   

18.
Phylogeographic relationships among 26 populations from throughout the geographic range of the Peromyscus eremicus species group are described based on sequence data for a 699-bp fragment of the mitochondrial DNA COIII gene. Distance, maximum-likelihood, and maximum-parsimony analyses of phylogenetic trees generated under four separate character-weighting strategies and representing five alternative biogeographic hypotheses revealed the existence of a cryptic species (Peromyscus fraterculus, previously included under P. eremicus) on the Baja California Peninsula and adjacent southwestern California and two distinct forms of P. eremicus, one from the Mojave, Sonoran, and northwestern Chihuahuan regional deserts (West) and one from the remainder of the Chihuahuan Desert (East). Distinctiveness of P. fraterculus is supported by previous morphometric and allozyme analyses, including comparisons with neighboring P. eremicus and parapatric P. eva, with which P. fraterculus shares a sister taxon relationship. Divergence of the eva + fraterculus, West + East eremicus, and P. merriami haplotype lineages likely occurred in the late Neogene (3 Ma), in response to northern extension of the Sea of Cortéz and elevation of the Sierra Madre Occidental; divergence of eva from fraterculus is concordant with the existence of a trans-Peninsular seaway during the Pleistocene (1 Ma); and divergence of West from East eremicus occurred during the Pleistocene pluvial-interpluvial cycles, but well before the Wisconsinan glacial interval. The sequence of divergence within the eremicus species group and causal association of geological events of the Neogene and Holocene provide a working hypothesis against which phylogeographic patterns among other arid-adapted species of the warm regional deserts of North America may be compared.  相似文献   

19.
Climate change predictions include warming and drying trends, which are expected to be particularly pronounced in the southwestern United States. In this region, grassland dynamics are tightly linked to available moisture, yet it has proven difficult to resolve what aspects of climate drive vegetation change. In part, this is because it is unclear how heterogeneity in soils affects plant responses to climate. Here, we combine climate and soil properties with a mechanistic soil water model to explain temporal fluctuations in perennial grass cover, quantify where and the degree to which incorporating soil water dynamics enhances our ability to understand temporal patterns, and explore the potential consequences of climate change by assessing future trajectories of important climate and soil water variables. Our analyses focused on long‐term (20–56 years) perennial grass dynamics across the Colorado Plateau, Sonoran, and Chihuahuan Desert regions. Our results suggest that climate variability has negative effects on grass cover, and that precipitation subsidies that extend growing seasons are beneficial. Soil water metrics, including the number of dry days and availability of water from deeper (>30 cm) soil layers, explained additional grass cover variability. While individual climate variables were ranked as more important in explaining grass cover, collectively soil water accounted for 40–60% of the total explained variance. Soil water conditions were more useful for understanding the responses of C3 than C4 grass species. Projections of water balance variables under climate change indicate that conditions that currently support perennial grasses will be less common in the future, and these altered conditions will be more pronounced in the Chihuahuan Desert and Colorado Plateau. We conclude that incorporating multiple aspects of climate and accounting for soil variability can improve our ability to understand patterns, identify areas of vulnerability, and predict the future of desert grasslands.  相似文献   

20.
Some plants require only one 24-hr cycle of the appropriate photoperiod to be induced to flower; others require seven or more. To try to understand the basis for this striking difference, the length of the leaf plastochron was determined for Xanthium and Perilla in the same experiments in which their sensitivity to various numbers of photoperiodic cycles was measured. The general finding was that for full floral induction there had to be as many 24-hr inductive cycles as there were days in the plastochron. When the total days in the plastochron were altered by environmental manipulation, the cycles required for floral induction altered in parallel.  相似文献   

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