Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, School of Biosciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
Section for Forest, Nature and Biomass, Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management, University of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg C, Denmark.
Mol Ecol. 2022 Nov;31(22):5846-5860. doi: 10.1111/mec.16691. Epub 2022 Sep 27.
Ecotypes are distinct populations within a species that are adapted to specific environmental conditions. Understanding how these ecotypes become established, and how they interact when reunited, is fundamental to elucidating how ecological adaptations are maintained. This study focuses on Themeda triandra, a dominant grassland species across Asia, Africa and Australia. It is the most widespread plant in Australia, where it has distinct ecotypes that are usually restricted to either wetter and cooler coastal regions or the drier and hotter interior. We generate a reference genome for T. triandra and use whole genome sequencing for over 80 Themeda accessions to reconstruct the evolutionary history of T. triandra and related taxa. Organelle phylogenies confirm that Australia was colonized by T. triandra twice, with the division between ecotypes predating their arrival in Australia. The nuclear genome provides evidence of differences in the dominant ploidal level and gene-flow among the ecotypes. In northern Queensland there appears to be a hybrid zone between ecotypes with admixed nuclear genomes and shared chloroplast haplotypes. Conversely, in the cracking claypans of Western Australia, there is cytonuclear discordance with individuals possessing the coastal chloroplast and interior clade nuclear genome. This chloroplast capture is potentially a result of adaptive introgression, with selection detected in the rpoC2 gene which is associated with water use efficiency. The reason that T. triandra is the most widespread plant in Australia appears to be a result of distinct ecotypic genetic variation and genome duplication, with the importance of each depending on the geographic scale considered.
生态型是物种内适应特定环境条件的独特种群。了解这些生态型是如何建立的,以及它们在重新聚集时是如何相互作用的,对于阐明生态适应性是如何维持的至关重要。本研究以 Themeda triandra 为研究对象,这是一种分布于亚洲、非洲和澳大利亚的优势草原物种。它是澳大利亚分布最广泛的植物,具有独特的生态型,通常局限于较湿润和凉爽的沿海地区或较干燥和炎热的内陆地区。我们为 T. triandra 生成了一个参考基因组,并对 80 多个 Themeda 样本进行了全基因组测序,以重建 T. triandra 及其相关分类群的进化历史。细胞器系统发育树证实,澳大利亚曾两次被 T. triandra 殖民,生态型的分化先于它们到达澳大利亚。核基因组提供了证据,证明生态型之间在优势倍性水平和基因流方面存在差异。在昆士兰州北部,似乎存在一个生态型之间的混合区,具有混合的核基因组和共享的叶绿体单倍型。相反,在西澳大利亚的干裂黏土盆地上,存在着与沿海叶绿体和内陆分支核基因组个体的核质不和谐现象。这种叶绿体捕获可能是适应性渐渗的结果,在与水分利用效率相关的 rpoC2 基因中检测到了选择。T. triandra 是澳大利亚分布最广泛的植物的原因似乎是由于独特的生态型遗传变异和基因组加倍,而每个因素的重要性取决于所考虑的地理尺度。