INVESTIGADORES
PREMOLI IL'GRANDE Andrea Cecilia
artículos
Título:
Signs of rapid evolution in an invasive forest species: Drivers of the incipient neutral, adaptive and phenotypic divergence
Autor/es:
RIPA, RAMIRO R.; RONCAL, JULISSA; LINHART, YAN B.; FRANZESE, JORGELINA; RAFFAELE, ESTELA; PREMOLI, ANDREA C.
Revista:
FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Referencias:
Año: 2023 vol. 546
ISSN:
0378-1127
Resumen:
Evolutionary forces such as genetic drift and natural selection operate during the process of biological invasion. More specifically, nonnative populations suffer genetic and demographic bottlenecks, and are exposed to new environmental, climatic and biotic filters. Thus, neutral and/or adaptive drivers may contribute to genetic differentiation of the introduced germplasm. We hypothesize that the gene pool of fire-adapted species that become invasive in fire-prone ecosystems may differ from that of originally planted and native one because of novel selective forces and founder effects. Genetic impoverishment due to genetic drift could also be buffered by demographic processes as the production of a large aerial seed bank by serotiny. We conducted genomic analyses of the world’s most planted tree Pinus radiata using Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms, comparing introduced cohorts with and without fire exposure, and also with one population of the native range. Phenotypic traits of introduced cohorts were assessed for quantitative characters. In the introduced range we found lower expected heterozygosity and nucleotide diversity due to bottlenecks during introduction and commercial selection in orchards. We also detected decreased inbreeding, related to a serotinous seed bank that buffers bottlenecks. We found genomic regions under selection, both in the comparison between native and introduced range, and between introduced cohorts with and without exposure to fire. Within the introduced area, we observed possible fire-mediated diversifying selection for five quantitative traits. Our results show that both neutral and adaptive forces promote early divergence of the introduced species Pinus radiata. Also, fire acts as a rapid selection factor, prompting the incipient adaptive divergence of cohorts recruited after fires, facilitating invasion.