Authors
Jon Ågren, Christopher G Oakley, John K McKay, John T Lovell, Douglas W Schemske
Publication date
2013/12/24
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
110
Issue
52
Pages
21077-21082
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Organisms inhabiting different environments are often locally adapted, and yet despite a considerable body of theory, the genetic basis of local adaptation is poorly understood. Unanswered questions include the number and effect sizes of adaptive loci, whether locally favored loci reduce fitness elsewhere (i.e., fitness tradeoffs), and whether a lack of genetic variation limits adaptation. To address these questions, we mapped quantitative trait loci (QTL) for total fitness in 398 recombinant inbred lines derived from a cross between locally adapted populations of the highly selfing plant Arabidopsis thaliana from Sweden and Italy and grown for 3 consecutive years at the parental sites (>40,000 plants monitored). We show that local adaptation is controlled by relatively few genomic regions of small to modest effect. A third of the 15 fitness QTL we detected showed evidence of tradeoffs, which contrasts with the minimal …
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Scholar articles
J Ågren, CG Oakley, JK McKay, JT Lovell… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013