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Multi-Approaches Analysis Reveals Local Adaptation in the Emmer Wheat (Triticum dicoccoides) at Macro- but not Micro-Geographical Scale

Detecting local adaptation and its spatial scale is one of the most important questions of evolutionary biology. However, recognition of the effect of local selection can be challenging when there is considerable environmental variation across the distance at the whole species range. We analyzed pat...

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Autores principales: Volis, Sergei, Ormanbekova, Danara, Yermekbayev, Kanat, Song, Minshu, Shulgina, Irina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4368821/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25793512
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0121153
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author Volis, Sergei
Ormanbekova, Danara
Yermekbayev, Kanat
Song, Minshu
Shulgina, Irina
author_facet Volis, Sergei
Ormanbekova, Danara
Yermekbayev, Kanat
Song, Minshu
Shulgina, Irina
author_sort Volis, Sergei
collection PubMed
description Detecting local adaptation and its spatial scale is one of the most important questions of evolutionary biology. However, recognition of the effect of local selection can be challenging when there is considerable environmental variation across the distance at the whole species range. We analyzed patterns of local adaptation in emmer wheat, Triticum dicoccoides, at two spatial scales, small (inter-population distance less than one km) and large (inter-population distance more than 50 km) using several approaches. Plants originating from four distinct habitats at two geographic scales (cold edge, arid edge and two topographically dissimilar core locations) were reciprocally transplanted and their success over time was measured as 1) lifetime fitness in a year of planting, and 2) population growth four years after planting. In addition, we analyzed molecular (SSR) and quantitative trait variation and calculated the Q (ST)/F (ST) ratio. No home advantage was detected at the small spatial scale. At the large spatial scale, home advantage was detected for the core population and the cold edge population in the year of introduction via measuring life-time plant performance. However, superior performance of the arid edge population in its own environment was evident only after several generations via measuring experimental population growth rate through genotyping with SSRs allowing counting the number of plants and seeds per introduced genotype per site. These results highlight the importance of multi-generation surveys of population growth rate in local adaptation testing. Despite predominant self-fertilization of T. dicoccoides and the associated high degree of structuring of genetic variation, the results of the Q (ST) - F (ST) comparison were in general agreement with the pattern of local adaptation at the two spatial scales detected by reciprocal transplanting.
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spelling pubmed-43688212015-03-27 Multi-Approaches Analysis Reveals Local Adaptation in the Emmer Wheat (Triticum dicoccoides) at Macro- but not Micro-Geographical Scale Volis, Sergei Ormanbekova, Danara Yermekbayev, Kanat Song, Minshu Shulgina, Irina PLoS One Research Article Detecting local adaptation and its spatial scale is one of the most important questions of evolutionary biology. However, recognition of the effect of local selection can be challenging when there is considerable environmental variation across the distance at the whole species range. We analyzed patterns of local adaptation in emmer wheat, Triticum dicoccoides, at two spatial scales, small (inter-population distance less than one km) and large (inter-population distance more than 50 km) using several approaches. Plants originating from four distinct habitats at two geographic scales (cold edge, arid edge and two topographically dissimilar core locations) were reciprocally transplanted and their success over time was measured as 1) lifetime fitness in a year of planting, and 2) population growth four years after planting. In addition, we analyzed molecular (SSR) and quantitative trait variation and calculated the Q (ST)/F (ST) ratio. No home advantage was detected at the small spatial scale. At the large spatial scale, home advantage was detected for the core population and the cold edge population in the year of introduction via measuring life-time plant performance. However, superior performance of the arid edge population in its own environment was evident only after several generations via measuring experimental population growth rate through genotyping with SSRs allowing counting the number of plants and seeds per introduced genotype per site. These results highlight the importance of multi-generation surveys of population growth rate in local adaptation testing. Despite predominant self-fertilization of T. dicoccoides and the associated high degree of structuring of genetic variation, the results of the Q (ST) - F (ST) comparison were in general agreement with the pattern of local adaptation at the two spatial scales detected by reciprocal transplanting. Public Library of Science 2015-03-20 /pmc/articles/PMC4368821/ /pubmed/25793512 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0121153 Text en © 2015 Volis et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Volis, Sergei
Ormanbekova, Danara
Yermekbayev, Kanat
Song, Minshu
Shulgina, Irina
Multi-Approaches Analysis Reveals Local Adaptation in the Emmer Wheat (Triticum dicoccoides) at Macro- but not Micro-Geographical Scale
title Multi-Approaches Analysis Reveals Local Adaptation in the Emmer Wheat (Triticum dicoccoides) at Macro- but not Micro-Geographical Scale
title_full Multi-Approaches Analysis Reveals Local Adaptation in the Emmer Wheat (Triticum dicoccoides) at Macro- but not Micro-Geographical Scale
title_fullStr Multi-Approaches Analysis Reveals Local Adaptation in the Emmer Wheat (Triticum dicoccoides) at Macro- but not Micro-Geographical Scale
title_full_unstemmed Multi-Approaches Analysis Reveals Local Adaptation in the Emmer Wheat (Triticum dicoccoides) at Macro- but not Micro-Geographical Scale
title_short Multi-Approaches Analysis Reveals Local Adaptation in the Emmer Wheat (Triticum dicoccoides) at Macro- but not Micro-Geographical Scale
title_sort multi-approaches analysis reveals local adaptation in the emmer wheat (triticum dicoccoides) at macro- but not micro-geographical scale
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4368821/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25793512
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0121153
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