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DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12181
¤ OpenAccess: Hybrid
This work has “Hybrid” OA status. This means it is free under an open license in a toll-access journal.

Potential for evolutionary responses to climate change – evidence from tree populations

Florian Alberto,Sally N. Aitken,Ricardo Alı́a,Santiago C. González‐Martínez,Heikki Hänninen,Antoine Kremer,François Lefèvre,Thomas Lenormand,Sam Yeaman,Ross Whetten,Outi Savolainen

Local adaptation
Climate change
Ecology
2013
Evolutionary responses are required for tree populations to be able to track climate change. Results of 250 years of common garden experiments show that most forest trees have evolved local adaptation, as evidenced by the adaptive differentiation of populations in quantitative traits, reflecting environmental conditions of population origins. On the basis of the patterns of quantitative variation for 19 adaptation-related traits studied in 59 tree species (mostly temperate and boreal species from the Northern hemisphere), we found that genetic differentiation between populations and clinal variation along environmental gradients were very common (respectively, 90% and 78% of cases). Thus, responding to climate change will likely require that the quantitative traits of populations again match their environments. We examine what kind of information is needed for evaluating the potential to respond, and what information is already available. We review the genetic models related to selection responses, and what is known currently about the genetic basis of the traits. We address special problems to be found at the range margins, and highlight the need for more modeling to understand specific issues at southern and northern margins. We need new common garden experiments for less known species. For extensively studied species, new experiments are needed outside the current ranges. Improving genomic information will allow better prediction of responses. Competitive and other interactions within species and interactions between species deserve more consideration. Despite the long generation times, the strong background in quantitative genetics and growing genomic resources make forest trees useful species for climate change research. The greatest adaptive response is expected when populations are large, have high genetic variability, selection is strong, and there is ecological opportunity for establishment of better adapted genotypes.
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    Potential for evolutionary responses to climate change – evidence from tree populations” is a paper by Florian Alberto Sally N. Aitken Ricardo Alı́a Santiago C. González‐Martínez Heikki Hänninen Antoine Kremer François Lefèvre Thomas Lenormand Sam Yeaman Ross Whetten Outi Savolainen published in 2013. It has an Open Access status of “hybrid”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.