Signatures of natural selection in a foundation tree along Mediterranean climatic gradients
Temperature and precipitation regimes are rapidly changing, resulting in forest dieback and extinction events, particularly in Mediterranean-type climates (MTC). Forest management that enhance forests’ resilience is urgently required, however adaptation to climates in heterogeneous landscapes with m...
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Zusammenfassung: | Temperature and precipitation regimes are rapidly changing, resulting in
forest dieback and extinction events, particularly in Mediterranean-type
climates (MTC). Forest management that enhance forests’ resilience is
urgently required, however adaptation to climates in heterogeneous
landscapes with multiple selection pressures is complex. For widespread
trees in MTC we hypothesized that: patterns of local adaptation are
associated with climate; precipitation is a stronger factor of adaptation
than temperature; functionally related genes show similar signatures of
adaptation; and adaptive variants are independently sorting across the
landscape. We sampled 28 populations across the geographic distribution of
Eucalyptus marginata (jarrah), in South-west Western Australia, and
obtained 13,534 independent single nucleotide polymorphic (SNP) markers
across the genome. Three genotype-association analyses that employ
different ways of correcting population structure were used to identify
putatively adapted SNPs associated with independent climate variables.
While overall levels of population differentiation were low (FST = 0.04),
environmental association analyses found a total of 2,336 unique SNPs
associated with temperature and precipitation variables, with 1,440 SNPs
annotated to genic regions. Considerable allelic turnover was identified
for SNPs associated with temperature seasonality and mean precipitation of
the warmest quarter, suggesting that both temperature and precipitation
are important factors in adaptation. SNPs with similar gene functions had
analogous allelic turnover along climate gradients, while SNPs among
temperature and precipitation variables had uncorrelated patterns of
adaptation. These contrasting patterns provide evidence that there may be
standing genomic variation adapted to current climate gradients, providing
the basis for adaptive management strategies to bolster forest resilience
in the future. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.fttdz08v8 |