AI Article Synopsis

  • Warmer climates and extreme droughts threaten forest ecosystems, making it vital to understand how tree species, like silver fir (Abies alba), adapt to these changes.
  • The study examined growth traits and genetic information from 18 provenances of silver fir in Switzerland, revealing three distinct genetic clusters based on their growth responses.
  • Findings indicate that historical recolonization and natural selection influence the growth variability of silver fir, emphasizing the need for genetic and ecological studies to help species adapt to climate change and ensure their survival in European forests.

Article Abstract

Warmer climate and more frequent extreme droughts will pose major threats to forest ecosystems. Past demography processes due to post-glacial recolonization and adaptation to local environmental conditions are among the main contributors to genetic differentiation processes among provenances. Assessing the intra-specific variability of tree growth responses to such changes is crucial to explore a species' potential to cope with climate warming. We combined growth-related traits derived from tree-ring width series with neutral genetic information of 18 European provenances of silver fir (Abies alba Mill.) growing in two common garden experiments in Switzerland. Analyses based on neutral single nucleotide polymorphisms revealed that the studied provenances grouped into three longitudinal clusters. These three genetic clusters showed differences in growth traits (height and DBH), with the provenances from the eastern cluster exhibiting the highest growth. The Pyrenees cluster showed significantly lower recovery and resilience to the extreme drought of 2003 as well as lower values of growth autocorrelation. Q-F and correlation analyses with climate of provenance origin suggest that the differences among provenances found in some traits result from natural selection. Our study suggests that the last post-glacial re-colonization and natural selection are the major drivers explaining the intra-specific variability in growth of silver fir across Europe. These findings highlight the importance of combining dendroecology and genetic analyses on fitness-related traits to assess the potential of a species to cope with global environmental change and provide insights to support assisted gene flow to ensure the persistence of the species in European forests.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146393DOI Listing

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