Data from: Evidence of divergent selection for drought and cold tolerance at landscape and local scales in Abies alba Mill. in the French Mediterranean Alps
Understanding local adaptation in forest trees is currently a key research and societal priority. Geographically and ecologically marginal populations provide ideal case studies, because environmental stress along with reduced gene flow can facilitate the establishment of locally adapted populations...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding local adaptation in forest trees is currently a key research
and societal priority. Geographically and ecologically marginal
populations provide ideal case studies, because environmental stress along
with reduced gene flow can facilitate the establishment of locally adapted
populations. We sampled European silver fir (Abies alba Mill.) trees in
the French Mediterranean Alps, along the margin of its distribution range,
from pairs of high and low elevation plots on four different mountains
situated along a 170 km east-west transect. The analysis of 267 SNP loci
from 175 candidate genes suggested a neutral pattern of east-west
isolation-by-distance among mountain sites. FST outlier tests revealed 16
SNPs that showed patterns of divergent selection. Plot climate was
characterized using both in-situ measurements and gridded data that
revealed marked differences between and within mountains with different
trends depending on the season. Association between allelic frequencies
and bio-climatic variables revealed eight genes that contained candidate
SNPs of which two were also detected using FST outlier methods. All SNPs
were associated with winter drought and one of them showed strong evidence
of selection with respect to elevation. QST - FST tests for fitness
related traits measured in a common garden, suggested adaptive divergence
for the date of bud flush and for growth rate. Overall, our results
suggest a complex adaptive picture for A. alba in the southern French Alps
where, during the east to west Holocene recolonization, locally
advantageous genetic variants established both at the landscape and local
scales. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.t671s |