Affiliation:
1. Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences, Centre for Forest Conservation Genetics University of British Columbia 2424 Main Mall Vancouver BC V6T 1Z4 Canada
Abstract
Summary
Tree seedlings from populations native to drier regions are often assumed to be more drought tolerant than those from wetter provenances. However, intraspecific variation in drought tolerance has not been well‐characterized despite being critical for developing climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies, and for predicting the effects of drought on forests.
We used a large‐scale common garden drought‐to‐death experiment to assess range‐wide variation in drought tolerance, measured by decline of photosynthetic efficiency, growth, and plastic responses to extreme summer drought in seedlings of 73 natural populations of the two main varieties of Douglas‐fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii var. menziesii and var. glauca).
Local adaptation to drought was weak in var. glauca and nearly absent in menziesii. Var. glauca showed higher tolerance to drought but slower growth than var. menziesii. Clinal variation in drought tolerance and growth species‐wide was mainly associated with temperature rather than precipitation. A higher degree of plasticity for growth was observed in var. menziesii in response to extreme drought.
Genetic variation for drought tolerance in seedlings within varieties is maintained primarily within populations. Selective breeding within populations may facilitate adaptation to drought more than assisted gene flow.
Funder
Genome Alberta
Genome Canada
Genome British Columbia
Forest Genetics Council of British Columbia
Compute Canada
University of Alberta
Canadian Forest Service
Génome Québec
University of British Columbia
Alberta Innovates Bio Solutions
Cited by
3 articles.
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