Previous exposure mediates the response of eelgrass to future warming via clonal transgenerational plasticity.

2020 
Mortality and shifts in species distributions are among the most obvious consequences of extreme climatic events. However, the sub-lethal effects of an extreme event can have persistent impacts throughout an individual's lifetime and into future generations via within and transgenerational phenotypic plasticity. These changes can either confer resilience or increase susceptibility to subsequent stressful events, with impacts on population, community, and potentially ecosystem processes. Here we show how a simulated extreme warming event causes persistent changes in the morphology and growth of a foundation species (eelgrass, Zostera marina) across multiple clonal generations and multiple years. The effect of previous parental exposure to warming increased aboveground biomass, shoot length, and above to below ground biomass ratios while also greatly decreasing leaf growth rates. Long-term increases in above to below ground biomass ratios could indicate an adaptive clonal transgenerational response to warmer climates that reduces the burden of increased respiration in belowground biomass. These transgenerational responses were likely decoupled from clonal parent provisioning as rhizome size of clonal offspring was standardized at planting and rhizome starch reserves were not impacted by warming treatments. Future investigations into potential epigenetic mechanisms underpinning such clonal transgenerational plasticity will be necessary to understand the resilience of asexual foundation species to repeated extreme climatic events.
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