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Genome‐wide scans detect adaptation to aridity in a widespread forest tree species
Authors:Elizabeth McLean  Suzanne M Prober  William D Stock  René E Vaillancourt  Margaret Byrne
Institution:1. Science and Conservation Division, Department of Parks and Wildlife, , Perth, WA, 6983 Australia;2. CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences, , Perth, WA, Australia;3. Centre for Ecosystem Management, School of Natural Sciences, Edith Cowan University, , Perth, WA, Australia;4. School of Biological Sciences and National Centre for Future Forest Industries, University of Tasmania, , Hobart, TAS, 7000 Australia
Abstract:Patterns of adaptive variation within plant species are best studied through common garden experiments, but these are costly and time‐consuming, especially for trees that have long generation times. We explored whether genome‐wide scanning technology combined with outlier marker detection could be used to detect adaptation to climate and provide an alternative to common garden experiments. As a case study, we sampled nine provenances of the widespread forest tree species, Eucalyptus tricarpa, across an aridity gradient in southeastern Australia. Using a Bayesian analysis, we identified a suite of 94 putatively adaptive (outlying) sequence‐tagged markers across the genome. Population‐level allele frequencies of these outlier markers were strongly correlated with temperature and moisture availability at the site of origin, and with population differences in functional traits measured in two common gardens. Using the output from a canonical analysis of principal coordinates, we devised a metric that provides a holistic measure of genomic adaptation to aridity that could be used to guide assisted migration or genetic augmentation.
Keywords:assisted migration  canonical analysis of principal coordinates  climate resilience     Eucalyptus     genome‐wide scan  outlier analysis
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