In a variable world, plants must have strategies to deal with environmental conditions as they change. Understanding these strategies is critical since climate change not only affects mean conditions but also affects variability and predictability of those conditions. Doing so requires identifying how functional and life history traits interact throughout the life cycle to drive responses, as well as exploring how past variability will shape future responses. Here, I highlight relevant life history theory for predicting strategies in relation to the nature of environmental variability, relate theory to empirical studies integrating functional and life history traits to understand responses, and identify key areas for future research that will facilitate the application of this understanding toward predicting responses to climate change.
CITATION STYLE
Gremer, J. R. (2023). Looking to the past to understand the future: linking evolutionary modes of response with functional and life history traits in variable environments. New Phytologist, 237(3), 751–757. https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.18605
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