Plant species that persist during succession, from the colonization to the stabilization stages, face major
environmental changes. Such changes are believed to have significant effects on species performance. In subarctic
coastal dune systems, Leymus mollis colonizes the embryo dunes, on the upper limit of the beach. It reaches its
maximum density on the foredune, but also grows on older, stabilized ridges. This paper reports on the phenotypic
variations of some ecophysiological traits associated with the persistence of L. mollis on a dune system on the east
coast of Hudson Bay (northern Quebec). Leymus mollis ramets tend to have a lower net carbon assimilation rate
and water use efficiency, and a higher substomatal CO2 concentration on the stabilized dune than on the foredune.
However, these physiological differences cannot be explained by differences in leaf morphology or nitrogen
content. Under controlled conditions, ecophysiological differences observed in the field disappear, suggesting that
these are not genetic but determined by environmental changes along the foredune-stabilized dune gradient. We
propose that higher net carbon assimilation rate on the foredune might be related to higher sink strength in relation
to the growth-stimulating effect of sand burial.