Caloric restriction-mediated reproductive lifespan extension across multiple strains of the clonal aquatic plant Lemna turionifera
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Wiley
Abstract
Lifespan extension due to caloric restriction (CR) is a well-established aspect of animal
senescence that has been observed in many taxa. Contrastingly, there is much less evidence
in plants, even though it is straightforward to manipulate CR by restricting photosynthe-
sis through reduction in light intensity. One of the few studies to report CR-mediated
plant lifespan extension investigated reproductive lifespan in a single strain of the duck-
weed Lemna minor, a tiny, floating, aquatic plant. Here, with an aim of beginning to
test the generality of this phenomenon in plants, we considered a congeneric species,
L. turionifera, and examined CR-mediated lifespan extension in eight strains collected
from Alberta, Canada. We grew plants in the lab under axenic conditions, and manipu-
lated light intensity (and hence, putatively, CR) with neutral density filters. Plants that
grew under dimmer conditions had longer reproductive lifespans, on average, than those
that grew under brighter conditions, consistent with CR-mediated lifespan extension.
However, this came at the expense of a reduction in the capacity to contribute to popula-
tion growth: plants in dimmer conditions produced about the same total offspring spread
across their longer lifespans, leading to a reduced intrinsic rate of increase, measured at the
level of the individual. Expanding the taxonomic scope of studies on CR-mediated life-
span extension – especially in plants – remains an important goal in senescence research.
Description
Open access article. Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY 4.0) applies
Citation
Ketler, J. A., Herman, N. M., Chmilar, S. L., & Laird, R. A. (2026). Caloric restriction-mediated reproductive lifespan extension across multiple strains of the clonal aquatic plant Lemna turionifera. Oikos, 2026(4), Article e11699. https://doi.org/10.1002/oik.11699