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Landscape genomics and a common garden trial reveal adaptive differentiation to temperature across Europe in the tree species Alnus glutinosa
Authors:Hanne De Kort  Katrien Vandepitte  Hans Henrik Bruun  Déborah Closset‐Kopp  Olivier Honnay  Joachim Mergeay
Affiliation:1. Plant Conservation and Population Biology, Department of Biology, University of Leuven, , Heverlee, B‐3001 Belgium;2. Ecology and Evolution Section, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen, , K?benhavn, 2100 Denmark;3. Research unit of “Ecologie et Dynamique des Systèmes Anthropisés”, Jules Vernes University of Picardy, , Amiens, F‐80037 France;4. Research Institute for Nature and Forest, , Geraardsbergen, B‐9500 Belgium
Abstract:
The adaptive potential of tree species to cope with climate change has important ecological and economic implications. Many temperate tree species experience a wide range of environmental conditions, suggesting high adaptability to new environmental conditions. We investigated adaptation to regional climate in the drought‐sensitive tree species Alnus glutinosa (Black alder), using a complementary approach that integrates genomic, phenotypic and landscape data. A total of 24 European populations were studied in a common garden and through landscape genomic approaches. Genotyping‐by‐sequencing was used to identify SNPs across the genome, resulting in 1990 SNPs. Although a relatively low percentage of putative adaptive SNPs was detected (2.86% outlier SNPs), we observed clear associations among outlier allele frequencies, temperature and plant traits. In line with the typical drought avoiding nature of A. glutinosa, leaf size varied according to a temperature gradient and significant associations with multiple outlier loci were observed, corroborating the ecological relevance of the observed outlier SNPs. Moreover, the lack of isolation by distance, the very low genetic differentiation among populations and the high intrapopulation genetic variation all support the notion that high gene exchange combined with strong environmental selection promotes adaptation to environmental cues.
Keywords:adaptation  climate change  contemporary evolution  natural selection  quantitative genetics
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