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Plasticity in Vegetative Growth over Contrasted Growing Sites of an F1 Olive Tree Progeny during Its Juvenile Phase

Climatic changes impact fruit tree growth and severely limit their production. Investigating the tree ability to cope with environmental variations is thus necessary to adapt breeding and management strategies in order to ensure sustainable production. In this study, we assessed the genetic paramete...

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Autores principales: Ben Sadok, Inès, Martinez, Sebastien, Moutier, Nathalie, Garcia, Gilbert, Leon, Lorenzo, Belaj, Angelina, De La Rosa, Raúl, Khadari, Bouchaib, Costes, Evelyne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4465673/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26062090
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127539
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author Ben Sadok, Inès
Martinez, Sebastien
Moutier, Nathalie
Garcia, Gilbert
Leon, Lorenzo
Belaj, Angelina
De La Rosa, Raúl
Khadari, Bouchaib
Costes, Evelyne
author_facet Ben Sadok, Inès
Martinez, Sebastien
Moutier, Nathalie
Garcia, Gilbert
Leon, Lorenzo
Belaj, Angelina
De La Rosa, Raúl
Khadari, Bouchaib
Costes, Evelyne
author_sort Ben Sadok, Inès
collection PubMed
description Climatic changes impact fruit tree growth and severely limit their production. Investigating the tree ability to cope with environmental variations is thus necessary to adapt breeding and management strategies in order to ensure sustainable production. In this study, we assessed the genetic parameters and genotype by environment interaction (GxE) during the early tree growth. One hundred and twenty olive seedlings derived from the cross ‘Olivière’ x ‘Arbequina’ were examined across two sites with contrasted environments, accounting for ontogenetic trends over three years. Models including the year of growth, branching order, environment, genotype effects, and their interactions were built with variance function and covariance structure of residuals when necessary. After selection of a model, broad sense heritabilities were estimated. Despite strong environmental effect on most traits, no GxE was found. Moreover, the internal structure of traits co-variation was similar in both sites. Ontogenetic growth variation, related to (i) the overall tree form and (ii) the growth and branching habit at growth unit scale, was not altered by the environment. Finally, a moderate to strong genetic control was identified for traits at the whole tree scale and at internode scale. Among all studied traits, the maximal internode length exhibited the highest heritability (H(2) = 0.74). Considering the determinant role of this trait in tree architecture and its stability across environments, this study consolidates its relevance for breeding.
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spelling pubmed-44656732015-06-25 Plasticity in Vegetative Growth over Contrasted Growing Sites of an F1 Olive Tree Progeny during Its Juvenile Phase Ben Sadok, Inès Martinez, Sebastien Moutier, Nathalie Garcia, Gilbert Leon, Lorenzo Belaj, Angelina De La Rosa, Raúl Khadari, Bouchaib Costes, Evelyne PLoS One Research Article Climatic changes impact fruit tree growth and severely limit their production. Investigating the tree ability to cope with environmental variations is thus necessary to adapt breeding and management strategies in order to ensure sustainable production. In this study, we assessed the genetic parameters and genotype by environment interaction (GxE) during the early tree growth. One hundred and twenty olive seedlings derived from the cross ‘Olivière’ x ‘Arbequina’ were examined across two sites with contrasted environments, accounting for ontogenetic trends over three years. Models including the year of growth, branching order, environment, genotype effects, and their interactions were built with variance function and covariance structure of residuals when necessary. After selection of a model, broad sense heritabilities were estimated. Despite strong environmental effect on most traits, no GxE was found. Moreover, the internal structure of traits co-variation was similar in both sites. Ontogenetic growth variation, related to (i) the overall tree form and (ii) the growth and branching habit at growth unit scale, was not altered by the environment. Finally, a moderate to strong genetic control was identified for traits at the whole tree scale and at internode scale. Among all studied traits, the maximal internode length exhibited the highest heritability (H(2) = 0.74). Considering the determinant role of this trait in tree architecture and its stability across environments, this study consolidates its relevance for breeding. Public Library of Science 2015-06-10 /pmc/articles/PMC4465673/ /pubmed/26062090 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127539 Text en © 2015 Ben Sadok 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
Ben Sadok, Inès
Martinez, Sebastien
Moutier, Nathalie
Garcia, Gilbert
Leon, Lorenzo
Belaj, Angelina
De La Rosa, Raúl
Khadari, Bouchaib
Costes, Evelyne
Plasticity in Vegetative Growth over Contrasted Growing Sites of an F1 Olive Tree Progeny during Its Juvenile Phase
title Plasticity in Vegetative Growth over Contrasted Growing Sites of an F1 Olive Tree Progeny during Its Juvenile Phase
title_full Plasticity in Vegetative Growth over Contrasted Growing Sites of an F1 Olive Tree Progeny during Its Juvenile Phase
title_fullStr Plasticity in Vegetative Growth over Contrasted Growing Sites of an F1 Olive Tree Progeny during Its Juvenile Phase
title_full_unstemmed Plasticity in Vegetative Growth over Contrasted Growing Sites of an F1 Olive Tree Progeny during Its Juvenile Phase
title_short Plasticity in Vegetative Growth over Contrasted Growing Sites of an F1 Olive Tree Progeny during Its Juvenile Phase
title_sort plasticity in vegetative growth over contrasted growing sites of an f1 olive tree progeny during its juvenile phase
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4465673/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26062090
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127539
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