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- Title
CONSTRAINTS ON THE EVOLUTION OF TOLERANCE TO HERBICIDE IN THE COMMON MORNING GLORY: RESISTANCE AND TOLERANCE ARE MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE.
- Authors
Baucom, Regina S.; Mauricio, Rodney
- Abstract
Evolutionary biologists explain the maintenance of intermediate levels of defense in plant populations as being due to trade-offs, or negative genetic covariances among ecologically important traits. Attempts at detecting trade-offs as constraints on the evolution of defense have not always been successful, leading some to conclude that such trade-offs rarely explain current levels of defense in the population. Using the agricultural pest Ipomoea purpurea, we measured correlations between traits involved in defense to glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup, a widely used herbicide. We found significant allocation costs of tolerance, as well as trade-offs between resistance and two measures of tolerance to glyphosate. Selection on resistance and tolerance exhibited differing patterns: tolerance to leaf damage was under negative directional selection, whereas resistance was under positive directional selection. The joint pattern of selection on resistance and tolerance to leaf damage indicated the presence of alternate peaks in the fitness landscape such that a combination of either high tolerance and low resistance, or high resistance and low tolerance was favored. The widespread use of this herbicide suggests that it is likely an important selective agent on weed populations. Understanding the evolutionary dynamics of herbicide defense traits is thus of increasing importance in the context of human-mediated evolution.
- Subjects
BIOLOGICAL evolution; HERBICIDES; MORNING glories; AGRICULTURAL ecology; BIOTIC communities; GLYPHOSATE
- Publication
Evolution, 2008, Vol 62, Issue 11, p2842
- ISSN
0014-3820
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1558-5646.2008.00514.x