36‐year study reveals stability of a wild wheat population across microhabitats

Author:

Dahan‐Meir Tal12ORCID,Ellis Thomas James2ORCID,Mafessoni Fabrizio1,Sela Hanan34,Rudich Ori1,Manisterski Jacob4,Avivi‐Ragolsky Naomi1,Raz Amir15,Feldman Moshe1,Anikster Yehoshua4,Nordborg Magnus2,Levy Avraham A.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences Weizmann Institute of Science Rehovot Israel

2. Gregor Mendel Institute Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna BioCenter Vienna Austria

3. Institute of Evolution University of Haifa Haifa Israel

4. The Institute for Cereal Crops Improvement Tel‐Aviv University Tel Aviv Israel

5. Migal, Galilee Technology Center Kiryat Shmona Israel

Abstract

AbstractLong‐term genetic studies of wild populations are very scarce, but are essential for connecting ecological and population genetics models, and for understanding the dynamics of biodiversity. We present a study of a wild wheat population sampled over a 36‐year period at high spatial resolution. We genotyped 832 individuals from regular sampling along transects during the course of the experiment. Genotypes were clustered into ecological microhabitats over scales of tens of metres, and this clustering was remarkably stable over the 36 generations of the study. Simulations show that it is difficult to determine whether this spatial and temporal stability reflects extremely limited dispersal or fine‐scale local adaptation to ecological parameters. Using a common‐garden experiment, we showed that the genotypes found in distinct microhabitats differ phenotypically. Our results provide a rare insight into the population genetics of a natural population over a long monitoring period.

Funder

European Molecular Biology Organization

Publisher

Wiley

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