期刊论文详细信息
Ecology and Evolution
Evolution of flowering time in a selfing annual plant: Roles of adaptation and genetic drift
Miguel Navascués1  Renaud Vitalis1  Laurène Gay2  Margaux Jullien2  Vincent Ranwez2  Julien Dhinaut2  Joëlle Ronfort2 
[1] CIRAD INRAE Institut Agro IRD CBGP Univ Montpellier Montpellier France;CIRAD INRAE Institut Agro UMR AGAP Institut Univ Montpellier Montpellier France;
关键词: adaptation;    climate change;    flowering time;    selection gradient;    selfing;   
DOI  :  10.1002/ece3.8555
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Abstract Resurrection studies are a useful tool to measure how phenotypic traits have changed in populations through time. If these trait modifications correlate with the environmental changes that occurred during the time period, it suggests that the phenotypic changes could be a response to selection. Selfing, through its reduction of effective size, could challenge the ability of a population to adapt to environmental changes. Here, we used a resurrection study to test for adaptation in a selfing population of Medicago truncatula, by comparing the genetic composition and flowering times across 22 generations. We found evidence for evolution toward earlier flowering times by about two days and a peculiar genetic structure, typical of highly selfing populations, where some multilocus genotypes (MLGs) are persistent through time. We used the change in frequency of the MLGs through time as a multilocus fitness measure and built a selection gradient that suggests evolution toward earlier flowering times. Yet, a simulation model revealed that the observed change in flowering time could be explained by drift alone, provided the effective size of the population is small enough (<150). These analyses suffer from the difficulty to estimate the effective size in a highly selfing population, where effective recombination is severely reduced.

【 授权许可】

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