Underground storage organs occur in phylogenetically diverse plant taxa and arise from multiple tissue types including roots and stems. Thickening growth allows underground storage organs to accommodate carbohydrates and other nutrients and requires proliferation at various lateral meristems followed by cell expansion. The WOX-CLE module regulates thickening growth via the vascular cambium in several eudicot systems, but the molecular mechanisms of proliferation at other lateral meristems are not well understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe used nuclear genomic data and statistical models to evaluate the ecological and evolutionary processes shaping spatial variation in species richness in (Liliaceae, 74 spp.). occupies diverse habitats in the western United States and Mexico and has a center of diversity in the California Floristic Province, marked by multiple orogenies, winter rainfall, and highly divergent climates and substrates (including serpentine).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAs the global climate crisis continues, predictions concerning how wild populations will respond to changing climate conditions are informed by an understanding of how populations have responded and/or adapted to climate variables in the past. Changes in the local biotic and abiotic environment can drive differences in phenology, physiology, morphology and demography between populations leading to local adaptation, yet the molecular basis of adaptive evolution in wild non-model organisms is poorly understood. We leverage comparisons between two lineages of Calochortus venustus occurring along parallel transects that allow us to identify loci under selection and measure clinal variation in allele frequencies as evidence of population-specific responses to selection along climatic gradients.
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