Annual and perennial high‑Andes species have a contrasting freezing‑resistance mechanism to cope with summer frosts
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Morales, Loreto V.
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Annual and perennial high‑Andes species have a contrasting freezing‑resistance mechanism to cope with summer frosts
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Abstract
In high-mountain habitats, summer frosts have negative consequences for plant fitness, therefore high-mountain plants have
developed mechanisms of avoidance and tolerance to cope with freezing temperatures. Various hypotheses have been proposed
to explain the prevalence of one freezing-resistance mechanism over another, focusing on thermal conditions without
a consensus. We hypothesize that the prevalence of a freezing-resistance mechanism depends on the life-history strategy
of the species, and is probably the consequence of a trade-off between growth/reproduction and the cost of the mechanism.
Specifically, short-lived annual species should be freezing avoidant, whereas perennial long-lived species should be freezing
tolerant. We used thermal analysis to determine the mechanism of freezing resistance of leaves and flowers for 10 annual
and 14 perennial herb species from an alpine ecosystem in the Central Chilean Andes. We found that 70% of the annual
species, their flowers and leaves were freezing avoidant, indicating that avoidance was their predominant freezing-resistance
mechanism. In the case of perennial species, both mechanisms were almost equally represented in flowers and leaves. Overall,
our results showed that a species freezing-resistance mechanism depends on its life-history strategy, and that leaves
and flowers of single species exhibit the same freezing resistance mechanism, suggesting a common whole plant strategy.
Further, freezing resistance strategies were not found to be mutually exclusive. In some cases, a specific combination of
phenological, structural, and functional strategies may determine how freezing resistant vegetative and reproductive organs
are to freezing during the growing season.
Patrocinador
National Commission for Science and Technology (CONICYT) through the National Fund for Scientific and Technological Development FONDECYT
11150710
Doctoral Scholarship CONICYT
21151063
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Alpine Botany. Vol.130 (2): 169-178 Aug 2020
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