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Clinal versus disruptive latitudinal variation in fruit traits of a South American mistletoe

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A Correction to this article was published on 10 December 2022

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Abstract

Fruit traits have historically been interpreted as plant adaptations to their seed dispersers. On the other hand, different environmental factors, which vary spatially and temporally, can shape fruit-trait variation. The mistletoe Tristerix corymbosus has a latitudinal distribution along the South American Pacific rim that encompasses two different biomes, the matorral of central Chile and the temperate forest that extends south of the matorral. This mistletoe shows contrasting fruiting phenology (spring vs summer), fruit color (yellow vs green), and seed dispersers (birds vs marsupial) in these two biomes. We characterized geographic variation of morphological and nutritional fruit traits of T. corymbosus to evaluate which macroecological factor, biome or latitude, better explains spatial variation in these variables. For each of 22 populations, we obtained environmental data (temperature, precipitation, and canopy cover), measured fruit and seed morphology traits (size, shape, and weight), and pulp moisture and nutritional content (fiber, protein, fat, carbohydrates, ash, and caloric content). Patterns of variation for each variable were described by fitting and comparing five different simple models varying in slope, intercept or both. Fruit morphology showed a clear biome-related disruptive pattern, seed morphological traits were unrelated to either biome or latitude, whereas nutritional variables showed diverse patterns. Different environmental factors seem to affect fruit development and phenology, determining the observed fruit characteristics, with seed dispersers playing a minor role in shaping these patterns. More generally, the contrasting plant-seed disperser associations we addressed can be interpreted as the outcome of an ecological-fitting rather than of a coevolutionary process.

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Data availability

The datasets used and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

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Acknowledgements

We thank Mariano Rodriguez Cabal, Leonardo Amico, Romina Vidal Russell, and Cecilia Smith-Ramirez for their help in the field. Special thanks go to Romina Vidal Russell for their critical reading and useful comments on a previous version of this manuscript. We also thank Corporación Nacional Forestal (Chile), Universidad Austral (Chile) and the Administración de Parques Nacionales (Argentina) for granting permits to work in some populations.

Funding

Financial support was provided from Sigma Xi, the National Geographic Society and ANPCT-FONCYT (PICT-2328).

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Contributions

GCA and MAA conceived the idea; GCA collected data; AdV and GCA analyzed the data; GS-H conducted nutritional content analyses; GCA and MAA wrote the original draft; all authors contributed to the final version.

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Correspondence to Guillermo C. Amico.

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The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

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Communicated by David M Watson.

The original online version of this article was revised: Revised version of figures 6 and 7 updated.

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Amico, G.C., di Virgilio, A., Schmeda-Hirschmann, G. et al. Clinal versus disruptive latitudinal variation in fruit traits of a South American mistletoe. Oecologia 200, 397–411 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-022-05282-w

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-022-05282-w

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