Geranium robertianum L., plant form adapted to the specific conditions along railway: “railway-wandering plant”

M. Wierzbicka,H. Galera,B. Sudnik-Wójcikowska,B. Wiłkomirski

Published 2014 in Plant Systematics and Evolution

ABSTRACT

The question of whether any specific plant species are typically growing along railway tracks (the so-called “railway-wandering plants”) has been discussed for many years. This study proves the existence of a form of Geranium robertianum species growing along railway tracks in North–Eastern Poland. Floristic studies have been carried out in 246 areas along railway tracks. This particular species was found in 70 studied areas (28 %). Comparative studies were carried out on 12 plant populations growing in the fieldwork and in glasshouse cultivation. Plants growing along the railway tracks in Waliły were different from all other studied populations. They were small (smaller by 31 %, max. by 57 % than other plants), with little leaf blades representing different shapes and colour. In studies of light absorption by photosynthetic apparatus (chlorophyll fluorescence) under conditions of exposure to high light intensity, the plants from Waliły were proved to have a better adaptation capacity to stress conditions. Increased levels of anthocyanins—which provided better protection of the photosynthetic apparatus against insolation—were shown. The protective properties against water deficiencies and excessive insolation were genetically preserved and were found in the second generation of plants cultivated in a glasshouse. For the first time, a new plant form of G. robertianum—a “railway-wandering plant” adapted to the conditions prevailing along railway tracks—was confirmed to exist. The form has developed probably after 1886, when the Białystok–Zubki railway was built, featuring the Waliły railway station.

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