Authors
David B Lowry, John T Lovell, Li Zhang, Jason Bonnette, Philip A Fay, Robert B Mitchell, John Lloyd-Reilley, Arvid R Boe, Yanqi Wu, Francis M Rouquette Jr, Richard L Wynia, Xiaoyu Weng, Kathrine D Behrman, Adam Healey, Kerrie Barry, Anna Lipzen, Diane Bauer, Aditi Sharma, Jerry Jenkins, Jeremy Schmutz, Felix B Fritschi, Thomas E Juenger
Publication date
2019/6/25
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
116
Issue
26
Pages
12933-12941
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Local adaptation is the process by which natural selection drives adaptive phenotypic divergence across environmental gradients. Theory suggests that local adaptation results from genetic trade-offs at individual genetic loci, where adaptation to one set of environmental conditions results in a cost to fitness in alternative environments. However, the degree to which there are costs associated with local adaptation is poorly understood because most of these experiments rely on two-site reciprocal transplant experiments. Here, we quantify the benefits and costs of locally adaptive loci across 17° of latitude in a four-grandparent outbred mapping population in outcrossing switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.), an emerging biofuel crop and dominant tallgrass species. We conducted quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping across 10 sites, ranging from Texas to South Dakota. This analysis revealed that beneficial biomass …
Total citations
20202021202220232024171726128
Scholar articles
DB Lowry, JT Lovell, L Zhang, J Bonnette, PA Fay… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2019