Journal article
Journal of Plant Ecology, 2025
APA
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De-la-Cruz, I. M., Batsleer, F., Bonte, D., Diller, C., Izquierdo, J. L., Still, S., … Stenberg, J. (2025). Flowering responses of the woodland strawberry to local climate and reduced precipitation along a European latitudinal gradient. Journal of Plant Ecology.
Chicago/Turabian
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De-la-Cruz, Ivan M., F. Batsleer, D. Bonte, C. Diller, José Luis Izquierdo, Sonja Still, Sonia Osorio, et al. “Flowering Responses of the Woodland Strawberry to Local Climate and Reduced Precipitation along a European Latitudinal Gradient.” Journal of Plant Ecology (2025).
MLA
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De-la-Cruz, Ivan M., et al. “Flowering Responses of the Woodland Strawberry to Local Climate and Reduced Precipitation along a European Latitudinal Gradient.” Journal of Plant Ecology, 2025.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{ivan2025a,
title = {Flowering responses of the woodland strawberry to local climate and reduced precipitation along a European latitudinal gradient},
year = {2025},
journal = {Journal of Plant Ecology},
author = {De-la-Cruz, Ivan M. and Batsleer, F. and Bonte, D. and Diller, C. and Izquierdo, José Luis and Still, Sonja and Osorio, Sonia and Posé, David and de la Rosa, Aurora and Vandegehuchte, M. and Muola, A. and Hytönen, T. and Stenberg, J.}
}
Climate change creates novel environmental conditions that plant species must adapt to. Since plants are finely tuned to the seasonality of their environments, shifts in their phenology serve as some of the most compelling evidence of climate change’s impact. Understanding how key fitness-related phenological traits, such as flowering onset, respond to novel environments is crucial for assessing species’ plasticity and/or adaptive potential under climate change. Here, we investigated the onset of flowering in Fragaria vesca (woodland strawberry; Rosaceae) by translocating genotypes between four sites along a south-north gradient in Europe, encompassing its entire latitudinal distribution range with varying temperatures, precipitation patterns, and photoperiods. At each site, we included a reduced precipitation treatment using rain-out shelters to simulate drought conditions and assess their impact on flowering onset. Our findings revealed that southern and central European genotypes exhibited a delayed onset of flowering when translocated to the northernmost site. In contrast, no difference among genotypes was found in the onset of flowering when grown in more southerly sites. Reduced precipitation accelerated flowering across several sites and all genotypes, irrespective of their latitudinal origin. Overall, northern European genotypes showed a greater capacity to adjust their onset of flowering in response to the different photoperiods and temperatures across the latitudinal gradient compared to southern European genotypes, suggesting that they may be more resilient to shifting environmental conditions. Differences in phenotypic plasticity among genotypes translocated to higher versus lower latitudes highlight the role of photoperiod in evaluating a species’ capacity to cope with climate change.