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Adaptation to variation in growing season length in arctic populations of Saxifraga oppositifolia L.
Authors:R.M.M. Crawford  H.M. Chapman  L.C. Smith
Affiliation:Plant Science Laboratories , St Andrews University , Sir Harold Mitchell Building, St Andrews, Fife , KY16 9AL
Abstract:Summary

At high latitudes Saxifraga oppositifolia exists with distinct ecotypes adapted to differences in growing season length. In areas with late snow-lie and cold, wet soils increased metabolic rates and rapid shoot production compensate for ultra-short growing seasons but do not conserve carbohydrate or water for adverse periods. An opposing strategy is evident in ecotypes living in sites with an earlier resumption of growth where soils are warmer and drier and the growing season longer. Here metabolic rates are lower and result in a greater ability to conserve both carbohydrate and water. The existence of opposing strategies for survival in warm and cold habitats, suggests that even in the minimal thermal conditions of the high Arctic a high degree of biodiversity gives the species as a whole a wide ecological amplitude. This degree of diversity not only increases the sites in which the species can survive but confers an ability to adapt to climate change by changing ecotype frequencies to accommodate climatic fluctuations. This facility may have contributed to the survival of populations of this and other species in the high Arctic during the Weichselian glaciation.
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