Decoupling of height growth and drought or pest resistance tradeoffs is revealed through multiple common-garden experiments of lodgepole pine

Author:

Liu Yang12345ORCID,Erbilgin Nadir6ORCID,Cappa Eduardo Pablo78,Chen Charles9,Ratcliffe Blaise1,Wei Xiaojing6,Klutsch Jennifer G610,Ullah Aziz6,Azcona Jaime Sebastian611,Thomas Barb R6ORCID,El-Kassaby Yousry A1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences, University of British Columbia , Vancouver, British Columbia , Canada

2. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge , Cambridge , United Kingdom

3. Wolfson College, University of Cambridge , Cambridge , UK

4. Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation (QAAFI), Centre for Crop Science, University of Queensland , St. Lucia, Queensland , Australia

5. ARC Centre of Excellence for Plant Success in Nature and Agriculture, School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland , St. Lucia, Queensland , Australia

6. Department of Renewable Resources, University of Alberta , Edmonton, Alberta , Canada

7. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA), Instituto de Recursos Biológicos, Centro de Investigación en Recursos Naturales , Hurlingham, Buenos Aires , Argentina

8. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET) , Buenos Aires , Argentina

9. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 246 Noble Research Center, Oklahoma State University , Stillwater, OK , United States

10. Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, Northern Forestry Centre , Edmonton, Alberta , Canada

11. Irrigation and Crop Ecophysisology Group, Instituto de Recursos Naturales y Agrobiología de Sevilla , Sevilla , Spain

Abstract

AbstractThe environment could alter growth and resistance tradeoffs in plants by affecting the ratio of resource allocation to various competing traits. Yet, how and why functional tradeoffs change over time and space is poorly understood particularly in long-lived conifer species. By establishing four common-garden test sites for five lodgepole pine populations in western Canada, combined with genomic sequencing, we revealed the decoupling pattern and genetic underpinnings of tradeoffs between height growth, drought resistance based on δ13C and dendrochronology, and metrics of pest resistance based on pest suitability ratings. Height and δ13C correlation displayed a gradient change in magnitude and/or direction along warm-to-cold test sites. All cold test sites across populations showed a positive height and δ13C relationship. However, we did not observe such a clinal correlation pattern between height or δ13C and pest suitability. Further, we found that the study populations exhibiting functional tradeoffs or synergies to various degrees in test sites were driven by non-adaptive evolutionary processes rather than adaptive evolution or plasticity. Finally, we found positive genetic relationships between height and drought or pest resistance metrics and probed five loci showing potential genetic tradeoffs between northernmost and the other populations. Our findings have implications for deciphering the ecological, evolutionary, and genetic bases of the decoupling of functional tradeoffs due to environmental change.

Funder

Oklahoma State University

Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment

Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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