Massatti Rob, Prendeville Holly R, Larson Steve, Richardson Bryce A, Waldron Blair, Kilkenny Francis F
Southwest Biological Science Center U.S. Geological Survey Flagstaff Arizona.
U.S.D.A. Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station Corvallis Oregon.
Evol Appl. 2018 Sep 24;11(10):2025-2039. doi: 10.1111/eva.12704. eCollection 2018 Dec.
A species' population structure and history are critical pieces of information that can help guide the use of available native plant materials in restoration treatments and decide what new native plant materials should be developed to meet future restoration needs. In the western United States, (bluebunch wheatgrass; Poaceae) is an important component of grassland and shrubland plant communities and commonly used for restoration due to its drought resistance and competitiveness with exotic weeds. We used next-generation sequencing data to investigate the processes that shaped 's geographic pattern of genetic variation across the Intermountain West. 's genetic diversity is partitioned into populations that likely differentiated since the Last Glacial Maximum. Adjacent populations display varying magnitudes of historical gene flow, with migration rates ranging from multiple migrants per generation to multiple generations per migrant. When considering the commercial germplasm sources available for restoration, genetic identities remain representative of the wildland localities from which germplasm sources were originally developed, and they maintain high levels of heterozygosity and nucleotide diversity. However, the commercial germplasm sources represent a small fraction of the overall genetic diversity of in the Intermountain West. Given the low migration rates and long divergence times between some pairs of populations, using commercial germplasm sources could facilitate undesirable restoration outcomes when used in certain geographic areas, even if the environment in which the commercial materials thrive is similar to that of the restoration site. As such, population structure and history can be used to provide guidance on what geographic areas may need additional native plant materials so that restoration efforts support species and community resilience and improve outcomes.
一个物种的种群结构和历史是关键信息,有助于指导在恢复治理中使用现有的本地植物材料,并决定应开发哪些新的本地植物材料以满足未来的恢复需求。在美国西部,蓝茎冰草(禾本科)是草原和灌木地植物群落的重要组成部分,因其抗旱性以及与外来杂草的竞争力而常用于恢复工作。我们利用下一代测序数据来研究塑造蓝茎冰草在山间西部遗传变异地理格局的过程。蓝茎冰草的遗传多样性被划分到自末次盛冰期以来可能已经分化的种群中。相邻种群显示出不同程度的历史基因流,迁移率从每代多个迁移个体到每个迁移个体历经多代不等。在考虑可用于恢复的商业种质资源时,遗传特征仍然代表着最初开发种质资源的野外地点,并且它们保持着高水平的杂合性和核苷酸多样性。然而,商业种质资源仅占山间西部蓝茎冰草总体遗传多样性的一小部分。鉴于某些蓝茎冰草种群对之间的低迁移率和长分化时间,在某些地理区域使用商业种质资源可能会导致不理想的恢复结果,即使商业材料生长良好的环境与恢复地点相似。因此,种群结构和历史可用于指导哪些地理区域可能需要额外的本地植物材料,以便恢复工作支持物种和群落的恢复力并改善结果。