Circumstantial evidence suggests that plants that have evolved
metal tolerance are at a disadvantage on normal soil,
i.e. there is a cost of tolerance. One hypothesis for the cause of this
cost is that individuals have a greater
requirement for copper, and so suffer micronutrient deficiency on normal
soils, as a result of a reduced uptake,
distribution and/or utilization of copper. We provided highly and less
copper-tolerant plants of Mimulus guttatus
Fischer ex DC. (the common monkey flower) with sub-optimal copper, and
demonstrated the importance of
copper as an essential micronutrient during the reproductive phase, both
in the production of viable pollen and
in seed set. We also looked at the effect of sub-optimal copper supply
on the growth of the microgametophyte, and
the efficiency with which seed was set. No evidence was found that highly
tolerant plants have an increased copper
requirement during the reproductive phase. This is in agreement with earlier
work on Mimulus guttatus, which
investigated the copper requirement of highly tolerant plants during vegetative
growth and found that any
differences in copper requirement were small. The ‘metal requirement
hypothesis’ is, therefore, not the sole
explanation for the cost of copper tolerance in M. guttatus.