Scots pine – panmixia and the elusive signal of genetic adaptation

Author:

Bruxaux Jade1ORCID,Zhao Wei1ORCID,Hall David12ORCID,Curtu Alexandru Lucian3ORCID,Androsiuk Piotr4ORCID,Drouzas Andreas D.5,Gailing Oliver6ORCID,Konrad Heino7ORCID,Sullivan Alexis R.1ORCID,Semerikov Vladimir8,Wang Xiao‐Ru1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Environmental Science, Umeå Plant Science Center Umeå University 901 87 Umeå Sweden

2. Forestry Research Institute of Sweden (Skogforsk) 918 21 Sävar Sweden

3. Department of Silviculture Transilvania University of Braşov 500123 Braşov Romania

4. Department of Plant Physiology, Genetics and Biotechnology, Faculty of Biology and Biotechnology University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn 10‐719 Olsztyn Poland

5. Laboratory of Systematic Botany and Phytogeography, School of Biology Aristotle University of Thessaloniki 54124 Thessaloniki Greece

6. Department of Forest Genetics and Forest Tree Breeding University of Göttingen 37077 Göttingen Germany

7. Department of Forest Biodiversity and Nature Conservation, Unit of Ecological Genetics Austrian Research Centre for Forests (BFW) 1140 Vienna Austria

8. Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology, Ural Division of Russian Academy of Sciences 620144 Ekaterinburg Russia

Abstract

Summary Scots pine is the foundation species of diverse forested ecosystems across Eurasia and displays remarkable ecological breadth, occurring in environments ranging from temperate rainforests to arid tundra margins. Such expansive distributions can be favored by various demographic and adaptive processes and the interactions between them. To understand the impact of neutral and selective forces on genetic structure in Scots pine, we conducted range‐wide population genetic analyses on 2321 trees from 202 populations using genotyping‐by‐sequencing, reconstructed the recent demography of the species and examined signals of genetic adaptation. We found a high and uniform genetic diversity across the entire range (global FST 0.048), no increased genetic load in expanding populations and minor impact of the last glacial maximum on historical population sizes. Genetic‐environmental associations identified only a handful of single‐nucleotide polymorphisms significantly linked to environmental gradients. The results suggest that extensive gene flow is predominantly responsible for the observed genetic patterns in Scots pine. The apparent missing signal of genetic adaptation is likely attributed to the intricate genetic architecture controlling adaptation to multi‐dimensional environments. The panmixia metapopulation of Scots pine offers a good study system for further exploration into how genetic adaptation and plasticity evolve under gene flow and changing environment.

Funder

Svenska Forskningsrådet Formas

Carl Tryggers Stiftelse för Vetenskaplig Forskning

Vetenskapsrådet

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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