Selection on Crop-Derived Traits and QTL in Sunflower (Helianthus annuus) Crop-Wild Hybrids under Water Stress

Locally relevant conditions, such as water stress in irrigated agricultural regions, should be considered when assessing the risk of crop allele introgression into wild populations following hybridization. Although research in cultivars has suggested that domestication traits may reduce fecundity under water stress as compared to wild-like phenotypes, this has not been investigated in crop-wild hybrids. In this study, we examine phenotypic selection acting on, as well as the genetic architecture of vegetative, reproductive, and physiological characteristics in an experimental population of sunflower crop-wild hybrids grown under wild-like low water conditions. Crop-derived petiole length and head diameter were favored in low and control water environments. The direction of selection differed between environments for leaf size and leaf pressure potential. Interestingly, the additive effect of the crop-derived allele was in the direction favored by selection for approximately half the QTL detected in the low water environment. Selection favoring crop-derived traits and alleles in the low water environment suggests that a subset of these alleles would be likely to spread into wild populations under water stress. Furthermore, differences in selection between environments support the view that risk assessments should be conducted under multiple locally relevant conditions.


Introduction
Although gene flow from cultivated to wild populations has likely been occurring since the domestication of wild lineages, interest in the topic has increased with the commercialization of transgenic crops. Consequences of crop-wild hybridization may include the escape of engineered genes into wild populations [1], increased invasiveness of wild relatives of the cultivar [2] [3], and the potential for crop-wild hybrids to outcompete native taxa [4]. Crop-wild hybridization must thus be considered when discussing the potential impacts of transgenic cultivars. The selective advantage of an allele is the best predictor of its establishment and spread in a new population [5] [6], and potentially advantageous transgenic alleles have been documented in Cucurbita pepo [7], Helianthus annuus [8], and Oyrza sativa [9]. These studies suggest that transgenes can increase fitness in crop-wild individuals following introgression, but the ubiquity of their effects on wild populations under diverse selective environments is largely unknown.
Although much attention has been given to the escape of engineered transgenes, crop-wild hybridization may also contribute advantageous natural alleles to wild populations and can thus be used to model how selection acts on potential targets for genetic engineering. Hybridization between non-transgenic cultivars and wild relatives has resulted in the generation of at least seven types of agricultural weeds [10], and range expansion of wild populations following crop-derived allele introgression has been observed in Sorghum halapense, Rhododendron ponticum, and Manihot reptans [11]. Studies in sunflower have suggested that crop-like traits (i.e., earlier flowering time and a larger primary inflorescence) increase reproductive output in crop-wild hybrids under a range of natural conditions [12] [13]. Crop-derived alleles have been known to persist within wild populations for at least five generations following hybridization in sunflower [14] and ten generations in wild radish [15], suggesting that some crop-derived alleles may persist in the wild, contrary to expectation. Indeed, crop-derived alleles may have also contributed to the evolution of weediness in wild sunflower [16]. Estimations of selection for cropderived traits and alleles in wild environments may be applied toward understanding the consequences of transgene escape into the wild.
The fitness effects of a trait or allele likely differ with environmental factors. For example, when exposed to increased interspecific competition and herbicide application, the relative fitness of sunflower crop-wild hybrids increased compared to their wild counterparts, suggesting that crop-like traits are more advantageous under certain conditions [17] [18]. Studies in sunflower also show that crop-like flowering (early) was advantageous in the absence of herbivory [12] [13], but wild-like flowering (later) was favored when pre-dispersal herbivory was considered [13]. Increased pre-and post-dispersal predation has been observed for F 1 crop-wild hybrids relative to wild sunflower individuals [19] [20], suggesting that the presence of such herbivores could reduce hybrid fitness. The spread of otherwise advantageous crop-derived alleles may thus be mitigated by natural environmental factors. As such, fitness should be assessed over a range of locally relevant conditions.
Water stress is an important environmental factor influencing the fitness of crop-derived traits and alleles that has not been studied in crop-wild hybrids. Under drought conditions, plants may be more susceptible to disease and consequently derive greater benefit from transgenic disease resistance [21]. Given that there will be heightened demand for transgenic drought tolerance technologies since irrigated agriculture will increasingly be operating under water scarcity [22], it is important for crop-wild hybridization risk assessments to identify crop-like traits conveying success under water stress in natural habitats.
Characteristics that result in the efficient utilization of leaf surface area and corresponding leaf water potential at turgor loss are likely to be advantageous under arid conditions [23]. Cultivated sunflowers typically do not display these characteristics as selection for growth in water abundant agricultural environments has resulted in a trade-off with drought tolerance [24]. In cultivated sunflower lineages, water stress reduces stem height, stem diameter, number of leaves, and leaf area [25] [26]. Decreased shoot and inflorescence mass have been observed in both cultivated and wild sunflowers when exposed to water stress, but cultivated individuals were more susceptible to drought in terms of wilting morphology [27]. Nevertheless, it is possible that a subset of crop-derived traits and alleles may confer an advantage in arid environments following introgression into wild populations.
The application of quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping to crop-wild systems can elucidate the fitness effects of cultivarderived alleles in natural environments. Estimates of crop-derived allele additive effects among loci from QTL mapping, coupled with phenotypic selection analyses, improve our ability to predict if crop-derived alleles will introgress into wild populations. Cropderived alleles with strong additive effects that affect traits conferring a fitness advantage under diverse wild-like environments have a high probability for introgression. Comparisons of significant QTL may be made across populations and environments, allowing for the identification of crop-derived alleles that are likely to be favored across a wide range of relevant natural conditions [28].
Here we assess selection on crop-like traits in sunflower cropwild hybrids exposed to water stress. We then infer patterns of selection on QTL by predicting how selection may affect cropderived alleles in the tested environments. Specifically, we use a low water treatment in comparison to a control water treatment to investigate: (i) the direction and magnitude of selection acting on crop-like traits in each environment; (ii) the genetic architecture of these characteristics; and (iii) the inferred fitness effects of cropderived alleles under these conditions.

Study System
Common sunflower (H. annuus L.) is one of five highest production oilseed cultigens worldwide [29] and a model for studying crop-wild gene flow. Its weedy, self-incompatible wild relative (H. annuus var. annuus) is native to North America and has a rangeF extending throughout that of cultivated sunflower [30] [31] with abundance in the central and western United States [32]. Centuries of artificial selection have resulted in morpholog-ical divergence. Differences between cultivated and wild sunflower are readily observed in the number and size of heads, branching, leaf shape and size, and seed (achene) size [33]. Cultivated and wild sunflower populations frequently hybridize [34] [35], and crop-derived alleles are known to persist in the wild [14].

Mapping Population and Experimental Design
As previously described [33] [12] [36] recombinant inbred lines (RILs) were developed from a cross between an oilseed cultivar (cmsHA89, PI650572) and a wild H. annuus var. annuus individual (Ann1238, PI659440) from Keith County, NE, USA. Seed for the present study came from the F 7 -F 9 generations of 146 RILs from this population.
Between 21-24 May 2012, eight seeds per experimental entry (RILs and parents) were germinated in a greenhouse at Central Washington University (CWU), Ellensburg, WA before transplanting into the field. Seeds of all lines were either sown directly into biodegradable pots (Jiffy, 30x30) with field-collected soil at a depth of 2.5 cm (91 RILs) or, in the case of lines with known poor or undetermined germination rates, subjected to a dormancybreaking treatment prior to planting (55 RILs). The soil type was a mitta ashy silt loam with a high available water capacity [37]. The dormancy-breaking treatment involved starting seeds that had been sterilized with 3% hydrogen peroxide on filter paper in Petri dishes, treating them with 25 ppm Ethephon for 24 hours, and transplanting them into the greenhouse upon cotyledon emergence.
Upon emergence of the first true leaves, 18-28 June 2012, individuals of the 58 RILs with at least four replicates per line were transplanted into the field at CWU using a randomized complete block design. Replicates of each RIL were evenly split among four blocks and fully randomized across 24 paired rows within each block. Spacing was 0.3 m between paired rows and 0.4 m between plants within a row. The field was tilled before transplanting to simulate disturbed habitat that wild sunflower populations frequently colonize. The field site was located from the nearest wild sunflower population by ca. 40 km, thereby ensuring isolation. This region, which is an important irrigated agricultural area, receives less than 5 cm of precipitation and has daytime relative humidity of ca. 45% during the June -September period when this experiment took place.
To help ensure establishment, seedlings were watered twice weekly before beginning water treatments on 24 July 2012. At that time, two blocks each were assigned to control water (CW) and low water (LW) treatments, to simulate regional cultivated and wild sunflower water conditions, respectively. CW blocks were spray irrigated for two hours once a week, and LW blocks were not watered throughout the growing season. Irrigation ceased in the LW blocks pre-flowering to stress plants during reproductive growth phases. Hand weeding was performed to minimize the effect of asymmetric interspecific competition between treatments.

Plant Characteristics
Plants began flowering on 1 August 2012. Flowering day was recorded upon opening of the first disc floret on the primary inflorescence of the first flowering plant. At peak flowering, plant water status was collectively evaluated for each individual using leaf pressure potential and leaf water content. The largest leaf of each plant was collected pre-dawn on 9 September 2012 and used to measure leaf pressure potential in the laboratory using a standard pressure chamber (Soilmoisture Equipment Corp.). Leaf water content was measured on the same leaf as a proportion of dry to wet mass; each leaf was massed before and after drying for three days in an oven at 32uC.
At the start of senescence (sunflower developmental stage, R-8) [38], approximately 15 weeks of age, morphological characteristics were measured. Stem diameter was measured at the base of the individual and plant height was measured from the base to the capitulum along the primary stem. Petiole length, leaf (blade) length, and leaf width were recorded for the largest leaf on the plant. Head diameter was determined for the primary inflorescence. Head total refers to the number of developing capitula exceeding 3 cm in diameter. Branch number was counted as the number of axillary shoots developed from the primary shoot. All seeds were collected and weighed for each individual. Total seed mass and the mean mass of ten seeds were used to indirectly estimate total fecundity (i.e., total number of seeds produced). Leaf size was estimated by multiplying leaf length by width.

Quantitative Genetic and Selection Analysis
Only RILs with data from at least two replicates in each water treatment for all characteristics were included in analyses (except for the selection analyses), resulting in a total of 237 individuals from 32 RILs (see discussion). All analyses were conducted using R [39], except for QTL mapping. A restricted maximum likelihood (REML) approach was used to test for the fixed effects of treatment, block, and planting date, as well as the random effects of line (RIL) and line-by-treatment on each characteristic (lme4 package) [40]. Models including only one random effect were compared separately (RLRsim package) [41]. Mixed model Fstatistic significance scores were also produced (lmerTest package) [42]. All characteristics met model assumptions. Models were then used to calculate least-squares means (lsmeans package) [43] and variance components; broad-sense heritability was considered as a proportion of additive genetic (RIL) to total variance. REML models generated best linear unbiased predictors (BLUPs) used to estimate bivariate genotypic Pearson correlations within each treatment.
Aster models for life-history traits were used to characterize phenotypic selection on characteristics within each water treatment (aster package) [44]. These models utilize maximum likelihood linear methods and improve upon previous least squares methods by modeling multiple components of fitness into a single variable, as well as by specifying a particular distribution for each component of fitness [45] [46] [47]. All characteristics were regressed with the combined fitness variable based on two components: survival to reproduction (Bernoulli distribution) and fecundity (truncated Poisson distribution). In order to account for selection on plants that died prior to reproduction, all individuals that survived to the initiation of watering treatments were included in selection analyses. Final sample sizes were 476 individuals from 62 RILs in the CW treatment and 67 RILs in the LW treatment, respectively. Relative fitness was calculated as a proportion of mean population fecundity in each treatment [48]. Block was included as a model parameter. To test for significant effects of each trait, sub-models, each omitting one characteristic (df = 12, each), were compared against the full model (df = 13) using likelihood ratio tests. We also used aster to calculate 95% selection gradient (b) confidence intervals for each trait [49]. Variance inflation factors (VIF) [50] were used to assess whether any two characteristics violated assumptions of multicollinearity; however, no combination achieved a VIF greater than five and all characteristics were thus retained in the selection model.
Crop-or wild-like designations were assigned to either positive or negative linear selection for vegetative and reproductive growth characteristics using previous trait assignments for these RILs [33] [13] and by comparing the mean cultivated parent trait value to the RILs. For example, when irrigated, the cultivar developed a Table 1. Genetic and environmental effects on morphological and physiological characters.  much larger head diameter than the RIL population (Table S1), supporting that a larger head is a crop-like trait. Few seeds of the wild parental population germinated, likely due to high dormancy, and data for it could not be obtained. Leaf pressure potential and water content could not be assigned a crop-or wild-like distinction because these characteristics were strongly influenced by water treatment (Table 1; see discussion).

Genetic Mapping
Total genomic DNA of the full set of 169 RILs was isolated from 200-400 mg fresh leaf tissue (142 RILs) using the DNeasy Plant Maxi Kit (Qiagen). For the 27 RILs that could not germinate, gDNA was directly extracted from 100 mg of seeds. Samples were initially ground in 2 mL tubes using a TissueLyser (Qiagen) before 1 mL of washing buffer was added to each sample [51]. Tubes were mixed on ice for 5 min and then centrifuged at 16,000 rpm for 10 min at 4uC. The supernatant was discarded and the pellet was used to extract gDNA following the DNeasy protocol provided by Qiagen. The quality of the DNA was evaluated by spectrophotometry using a NanoDrop ND-1000 (Thermo Fisher Scientifc). To ensure that the quality of the DNA extracted from seeds and leaf led to equivalent results, 23 randomly chosen RILs were genotyped using both types of tissues; no differences were observed between tissue types.
An array targeting 384 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) was developed from a subset of the SNPs present on the 10,640 feature Illumina Infinium array described by Bachlava et al. [52]. SNPs were selected based on known polymorphism between the parents based on an initial screen with the larger array as well as known map positions [53]. Genotyping was based on the Illumina GoldenGate platform and the VeraCode technology (Illumina, San Diego, CA). Genotypes were manually called using Geno-meStudio V2011.1 (Illumina). A total of 353 SNPs were  successfully scored and thus included in the analysis. Correlations between SNPs were estimated using the Pearson coefficient using the cor function [54] in R [39]. Visual examination of the correlation matrix as a heat map revealed that four SNPs (SFW00635, SFW08150, SFW00608, SFW05812) exhibited strong associations with distant positions in the genome. Given the history of duplication in the sunflower genome [55], this was presumably due to the mapping of different paralogs in different populations, as has been previously documented in sunflower [53]. Consequently, the relative positions of all SNPs for the 17 linkage groups were re-calculated using MAPMAKER/EXP 3.0 [56] [57] knowing a priori the assignment to each linkage group (LG). The Kosambi distance function was set for all linkage groups. The order of markers presumably belonging to a same LG was initially inspected using the ''LOD'' command. Based on this pairwise comparison matrix providing the distance (in cM) between SNPs and LOD scores, we made a core group of markers less than 5 cM apart and the relative order was evaluated by the ''compare'' command. The most likely order was kept and the remaining SNPs to be incorporated to the LG were sequentially added using the ''try'' command. At every step, the new order was evaluated using the ''ripple'' command. Once all SNPs were assigned to a LG, the map was enriched by adding 140 previously mapped simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers [58]. Each SSR was initially assigned to a LG using the ''near'' command. The relative position of the SSR within a LG was estimated using the ''try'' command and the final order was then checked using the ''ripple'' command.

QTL Mapping
QTL mapping was conducted using the SNP/SSR map on BLUPs for all characteristics using a composite interval mapping (CIM) protocol in QTL Cartographer [59]. Forward and backward regression settings were chosen (P = 0.05) with a walk speed of 2 cM. Significant logarithm of odds thresholds (LOD) were estimated with 1000 permutations tests per characteristic [60]. QTL Cartographer was used to calculate the additive effect of the cultivar allele and the percent variance explained by each QTL. The additive effect was standardized to one standard deviation. Multi-trait mapping to assess QTL 6 environment interactions was conducted in QTL Cartographer using aforementioned CIM settings [61].

Treatment Effects
Significant genetic variation was observed (RIL effects) for all characteristics except water content and RILs differed in their response to the water treatments (RIL 6treatment effects) for stem diameter, plant height, petiole length, leaf size, branch total, and head total (Table 1). For all characteristics, the degree of heritability was lower in the LW than the CW treatment ( Table 2). Of note, the heritability of leaf pressure potential and water content in the LW treatment approached 0.00, suggesting little additive genetic control for these characteristics.
With the exception of water content, watering treatment effects were significant (Tables 1). Individuals were generally smaller and had less reproductive output in the LW treatment, as well as displayed greater leaf pressure potential (Table 2). Despite significant treatment effects for most characteristics, the direction of significant among-trait correlations remained consistent across both watering regimes (Table S2).

Selection Analyses
Most characteristics indicated significant gradients for directional selection in both treatments (Table 3). Many characteristics showed consistent selection across environments. In both treatments, greater fecundity (higher fitness) was associated with: smaller stem diameter and larger plant height, petiole length, and head diameter, as well as more branches and greater water content. In contrast, the direction of selection differed between treatments for leaf size and leaf pressure potential. In the CW treatment, plants had higher fecundity if they displayed smaller leaf size and lower leaf pressure potential; selection estimates were reversed for these characteristics in the LW treatment. A greater number of heads and early flowering day were favored in the CW treatment although selection estimates were non-significant for these characteristics in the LW treatment.
Crop-or wild-like attributes may be assigned to each direction of selection for vegetative and reproductive growth characteristics. Three crop-like traits were favored by selection in each water treatment: head diameter and petiole length in both treatments, leaf size in LW and days to flower in CW. Due to strong influence of environmental variation, a crop-or wild-like attribute was not given to leaf pressure potential or water content.

Genetic Map Construction
The genetic map was composed of the expected 17 linkage groups and included a subset of 358 of the 384 targeted SNPs and a set of 140 previously described SSR markers [58] [12] [13], resulting in a total of 498 markers. The final map covered 1968.2 cM (range = 83.0-161.0 cM per linkage group), on par with previous studies in sunflower [62] [63], with an average intermarker interval of 3.9 cM (range = 0.0-27.1 cM).

QTL Mapping
Despite the low sample size, 44 QTL affecting ten characteristics were detected across both treatments (Table 4; Fig. 1). Twenty QTL for ten characteristics explaining 10.5-55.3% of the variance and 24 QTL for nine characteristics explaining 10.5-37.1% of the variance were mapped in the CW and LW treatments, respectively. At least one QTL was detected in both treatments for most characteristics, except plant height and leaf size in the CW treatment, head total in the LW treatment, and leaf pressure potential in both treatments. QTL 6 environment interactions were not statistically significant for any characteristic. Although QTL mapping in the present study utilized a small number of RILs, the number of QTL detected for traits that have been previously mapped using the same RIL population were not considerably fewer than in prior studies [12] [13] (see discussion), and 40% of these were detected on the same linkage group as previously reported for the same traits (Fig. 1).
Similar clustering of QTL on LG 17 for seven characteristics was observed in both treatments. The additive effect of the cropderived allele did not always confer the more crop-like trait ( Table 4). For example, the crop-derived allele at two QTL (LG 7, Figure 1. Graphical representation of quantitative trait locus (QTL) composite interval mapping results from QTL Cartographer. Characters were mapped using cultivar (cmsHA89) x wild (ann1238) sunflower recombinant inbred lines grown in control water (blue) and low water (brown) treatments. Fill indicates the positive (closed) or negative (empty) additive effect of the crop-derived allele, and asterisks mark QTL with an additive effect in the direction favored by selection. 1-LOD (box) and 2-LOD (tails) thresholds are shown. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0102717.g001 Table 4. Quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping results. 15.4 NA 16) increased branch number, even though domesticated individuals have been artificially selected to display limited branching phenotypes. In addition, cultivars had lower water content on average compared to hybrid individuals in LW treatment (Table  S1), despite detecting the crop-derived allele increasing water content at one QTL (LG 15) in the LW treatment. For characteristics affected by multiple QTL, only branch number and days to flower for the CW treatment, as well as fecundity in the LW treatment, indicated consistent direction of additive effects of the crop-derived allele at all QTL. Additive effects of the cropderived allele were in the direction of phenotypic selection analysis for 64% of QTL overall, although a greater proportion of cropderived alleles were predicted for selection in CW (75%) vs. LW (55%).

Discussion
Whether crop-or wild-like, the majority of traits conferring a fitness advantage in both environments generally increased plant competitive ability regardless of water stress. Characteristics related to competitive ability play a particularly important role in stressful, resource-limited environments as empty niche space determines habitat availability [64]. Stress alters the dynamics of biotic interactions [65] and accentuates the benefit of traits such as early vegetative growth [66]. Some competitive traits, such as resource allocation to increased vertical growth in sunflower, that may provide an advantage for procuring establishment in disturbed habitats against other colonizing plant species have been actively selected against in cultivars, where in an agricultural environment their proximity to other individuals is artificially manipulated [67]. Nevertheless, we found some evidence that crop-derived alleles contribute to competitive growth, suggesting that they are likely to aid in the expansion of hybrid plants in wild environments.
Although leaves in the LW treatment were comparatively smaller, crop-like (i.e. larger) leaf size was favored by selection only in the LW environment. Reduction in leaf size is a common response to water stress as it may be necessary to decrease resource loss and achieve equilibrium for maximal potential growth in relation to available resources [68]. Leaf size reduction is also important to increase water use efficiency [69]; however, too great a reduction may limit the photosynthetic ability in Helianthus species [70]. In addition, smaller leaves with a reduced boundary layer will not lower leaf temperature and thus will not create a water use efficiency benefit [71]. Greater petiole length may influence the relative advantage of leaf size as longer petioles promote leaves to twist away from direct sunlight [71]. It is difficult to generalize our leaf size results, as water availability may not always predict the same differential selection [72]. Cultivarderived alleles led to reduced or increased leaf size in the LW treatment depending on the locus. Future studies should attempt to separate direct effects of leaf size on tolerance of water stress from indirect effects due to its correlation with other traits.
Selection also reversed across treatments for leaf pressure potential. Positive selection for leaf pressure potential, as observed in the LW treatment, indicates that plants with a greater ability to move water through transpiration had greater fecundity. Unfortunately, through a combination of low heritability, greater influence of treatment than genotype, and no prior studies of this characteristic in crop-wild hybrids, we are unable to assign a croplike attribute for leaf pressure potential. Given that cultivated individuals display a greater degree of wilting relative to wild individuals when exposed to water stress [27], cultivars would presumably display greater susceptibility to water stress, in that they would be less able than wild individuals to maintain leaf pressure potential as water availability is reduced. While the present study included fewer RILs, our QTL mapping results are comparable with previous studies that utilized a greater sample size in the same population [33] [12] [13]. Small sample size in combination with low heritability in mapping populations can result in an upward bias in the variance explained by each QTL [73]. The detection of a small number of QTL of large effect thus cannot be used as the rationale for the simple genetic architecture of traits. Another consequence of small sample size is the potential for the detection of false positive QTL [74], but the generation of permutated significant LOD values is an accepted method to account for this [75]. Importantly, the additive effect of the crop-derived allele in our study was in the same direction as predicted from the selection analysis for approximately half the QTL (excluding water content and fecundity QTL) detected in the LW treatment, suggesting that the repeated detection of selection favoring crop-derived alleles may be advantageous under a broader range of natural conditions than otherwise thought [14] [15].
For many QTL, although the additive effect of the crop-derived allele was in the direction of selection, it conferred a more wild-like phenotype. For example, although decreased leaf size is a wild-like trait, the crop-derived allele had a negative additive effect for three QTL affecting this trait across both treatments. This result is not uncommon in QTL studies [76]. In previous studies of the same sunflower population, mixed effects of crop-derived alleles were found for several morphological characters [33] [12] [13]. In lettuce (Lactua sativa 6 L. serriola), the allelic directions were as expected for QTL for major effect but mixed for QTL of intermediate effect [7] [78] [79]. Consequently, failure to include genetic architecture methodology may present an incomplete consideration of crop allele introgression.
One caveat to all QTL studies using RILs is that they are limited to allelic variation between the two parent individuals. Although the wild individual in our study was collected from a semi-arid site, its drought tolerance is unknown and may not be representative of wild sunflowers in general. Nevertheless, several studies have now found that crop-derived traits and QTL are predicted for selection in a wild environment [12] [13] [79], supporting the hypothesis that the ability for hybrids to colonize new ecological habitats may have arisen from the migration of crop-derived alleles into wild populations [80]. That some alleles confer an advantage in both cultivated and wild environments indicates that adaptability to cultivated environments is present in the natural variation of some wild populations [16]. Selection for crop-derived traits and QTL in a water stressed environment is surprising given that selection for growth traits in domesticated sunflowers has led to a growth-drought tolerance trade-off [24], and that if plants display weedy characteristics, they tend to have more acute reactions to water and nutrient stress [81]. However, the intermediate levels of drought tolerance and root architecture observed in weedy sunflowers may reflect a hybrid origin [27], given the persistence of introgression from cultivated sunflowers. The possibility for greater fitness in hybrids with variable amounts of crop genome may arise from heterosis, linkage, and transgressive segregation [82]. It is important to note, as in this study, that increases in fecundity may not necessarily result in range expansion or increased invasiveness [83]. Despite this, one study observed greater colonization success as demonstrated by increased seedling emergence and survivorship, as well as earlier emergence in radish hybrids producing greater fecundity [84]. Selection for crop-derived traits and alleles in wild environments may contribute to range expansion and/or increased invasiveness of hybrid individuals but multigenerational studies are needed to more adequately predict the long-term consequences of crop-towild gene flow.