In the billion-dollar global illegal wildlife trade, rosewoods have been the world's most trafficked wild product since 2005. and are the most sought-after rosewoods in the Greater Mekong Subregion. They are exposed to significant genetic risks and the lack of knowledge on their adaptability limits the effectiveness of conservation efforts. Here, we present genome assemblies and range-wide genomic scans of adaptive variation, together with predictions of genomic offset to climate change. Adaptive genomic variation was differentially associated with temperature and precipitation-related variables between the species, although their natural ranges overlap. The findings are consistent with differences in pioneering ability and in drought tolerance. We predict their genomic offsets will increase over time and with increasing carbon emission pathway but at a faster pace in than in . These results and the distinct gene-environment association in the eastern coastal edge of Vietnam suggest species-specific conservation actions: germplasm representation across the range in and focused on hotspots of genomic offset in . We translated our genomic models into a seed source matching application, , to rapidly inform restoration efforts. Our ecological genomic research uncovering contrasting selection forces acting in sympatric rosewoods is of relevance to conserving tropical trees globally and combating risks from climate change.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10438386PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2301603120DOI Listing

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