NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC DRIVERS OF TREE EVOLUTIONARY DYNAMICS

Species of trees inhabit diverse and heterogeneous environments, and often play important ecological roles in such communities. As a result of their vast ecological breadth, trees have become adapted to various environmental pressures. In this dissertation I examine various environmental factors tha...

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Main Author: Lind, Brandon M
Format: Others
Published: VCU Scholars Compass 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/5359
https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6466&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-vcu.edu-oai-scholarscompass.vcu.edu-etd-64662019-10-20T22:05:32Z NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC DRIVERS OF TREE EVOLUTIONARY DYNAMICS Lind, Brandon M Species of trees inhabit diverse and heterogeneous environments, and often play important ecological roles in such communities. As a result of their vast ecological breadth, trees have become adapted to various environmental pressures. In this dissertation I examine various environmental factors that drive evolutionary dynamics in threePinusspecies in California and Nevada, USA. In chapter two, I assess the role of management influence of thinning, fire, and their interaction on fine-scale gene flow within fire-suppressed populations of Pinus lambertiana, a historically dominant and ecologically important member of mixed-conifer forests of the Sierra Nevada, California. Here, I find evidence that treatment prescription differentially affects fine-scale genetic structure and effective gene flow in this species. In my third chapter, I describe the development of a dense linkage map for Pinus balfouriana which I use in chapter four to assess the quantitative trait locus (QTL) landscape of water-use efficiency across two isolated ranges of the species. I find evidence that precipitation-related variables structure the geographical range of P. balfouriana, that traits related to water-use efficiency are heritable and differentiated across populations, and associated QTLs underlying this phenotypic variation explain large proportions of total variation. In chapter five, I assess evidence for local adaptation to the eastern Sierra Nevada rain shadow within P. albicaulisacross fine spatial scales of the Lake Tahoe Basin, USA. Here, genetic variation of traits related to water availability were structured more so across populations than neutral variation, and loci identified by genome-wide association methods show elevated signals of local adaptation that track soil water availability. In chapter six, I review theory related to polygenic local adaptation and literature of genotype-phenotype associations in trees. I find that evidence suggests a polygenic basis for many traits important to conservation and industry, and I suggest paths forward to best describing such genetic bases in tree species. Overall, my results show that spatial and genetic structure of trees are often driven by their environment, and that ongoing selective pressures driven by environmental change will continue to be important in these systems. 2018-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/5359 https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6466&context=etd © Brandon M. Lind Theses and Dissertations VCU Scholars Compass evolution pinus adaptation genetics california management Botany Evolution Forest Management Genetics Genomics Integrative Biology Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Other Forestry and Forest Sciences Plant Biology Plant Breeding and Genetics Population Biology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic evolution
pinus
adaptation
genetics
california
management
Botany
Evolution
Forest Management
Genetics
Genomics
Integrative Biology
Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Other Forestry and Forest Sciences
Plant Biology
Plant Breeding and Genetics
Population Biology
spellingShingle evolution
pinus
adaptation
genetics
california
management
Botany
Evolution
Forest Management
Genetics
Genomics
Integrative Biology
Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Other Forestry and Forest Sciences
Plant Biology
Plant Breeding and Genetics
Population Biology
Lind, Brandon M
NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC DRIVERS OF TREE EVOLUTIONARY DYNAMICS
description Species of trees inhabit diverse and heterogeneous environments, and often play important ecological roles in such communities. As a result of their vast ecological breadth, trees have become adapted to various environmental pressures. In this dissertation I examine various environmental factors that drive evolutionary dynamics in threePinusspecies in California and Nevada, USA. In chapter two, I assess the role of management influence of thinning, fire, and their interaction on fine-scale gene flow within fire-suppressed populations of Pinus lambertiana, a historically dominant and ecologically important member of mixed-conifer forests of the Sierra Nevada, California. Here, I find evidence that treatment prescription differentially affects fine-scale genetic structure and effective gene flow in this species. In my third chapter, I describe the development of a dense linkage map for Pinus balfouriana which I use in chapter four to assess the quantitative trait locus (QTL) landscape of water-use efficiency across two isolated ranges of the species. I find evidence that precipitation-related variables structure the geographical range of P. balfouriana, that traits related to water-use efficiency are heritable and differentiated across populations, and associated QTLs underlying this phenotypic variation explain large proportions of total variation. In chapter five, I assess evidence for local adaptation to the eastern Sierra Nevada rain shadow within P. albicaulisacross fine spatial scales of the Lake Tahoe Basin, USA. Here, genetic variation of traits related to water availability were structured more so across populations than neutral variation, and loci identified by genome-wide association methods show elevated signals of local adaptation that track soil water availability. In chapter six, I review theory related to polygenic local adaptation and literature of genotype-phenotype associations in trees. I find that evidence suggests a polygenic basis for many traits important to conservation and industry, and I suggest paths forward to best describing such genetic bases in tree species. Overall, my results show that spatial and genetic structure of trees are often driven by their environment, and that ongoing selective pressures driven by environmental change will continue to be important in these systems.
author Lind, Brandon M
author_facet Lind, Brandon M
author_sort Lind, Brandon M
title NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC DRIVERS OF TREE EVOLUTIONARY DYNAMICS
title_short NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC DRIVERS OF TREE EVOLUTIONARY DYNAMICS
title_full NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC DRIVERS OF TREE EVOLUTIONARY DYNAMICS
title_fullStr NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC DRIVERS OF TREE EVOLUTIONARY DYNAMICS
title_full_unstemmed NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC DRIVERS OF TREE EVOLUTIONARY DYNAMICS
title_sort natural and anthropogenic drivers of tree evolutionary dynamics
publisher VCU Scholars Compass
publishDate 2018
url https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/5359
https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6466&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT lindbrandonm naturalandanthropogenicdriversoftreeevolutionarydynamics
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