Patterns and mechanisms of heavy metal accumulation and tolerance in two
terrestrial moss species with contrasting habitat specialization
Abstract
Phenotypic variation in natural populations is crucial for rapid
adjustment to challenging environmental conditions such as exposure to
heavy metal pollution. Hence, the study of variation in traits related
to plant response to heavy metal stress provides valuable insight into
the likelihood of a population’s survival. We investigate the patterns
and mechanisms of intraspecific phenotypic variation for heavy metal
accumulation and tolerance in bryophytes, one of the most resilient yet
relatively understudied taxa. Two terrestrial mosses exposed to Cd and
Cu in the laboratory, the heavy metal specialist Scopelophila cataractae
and the facultative metallophyte Ceratodon purpureus, showed
intraspecific differences in tolerance to these metals. Only the heavy
metal specialist showed differences in accumulation which in the case of
Cu could be associated to preferential relocation towards the stem to
protect their main photosynthetic organs. We also report the first
evidence for sexual dimorphism for Cd tolerance in C. purpureus (females
being more tolerant than males). Our results provide support for high
variation in the capacity of bryophytes to respond to environmental
challenge despite potentially low levels of genetic variation and lack
of previous exposure to stress, as well as evidence for metal-dependent,
sex-specific differences in heavy metal tolerance in bryophytes.