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Dryad

Data from: Evaluating genomic data for management of local adaptation in a changing climate: a lodgepole pine case study

Cite this dataset

Mahony, Colin et al. (2019). Data from: Evaluating genomic data for management of local adaptation in a changing climate: a lodgepole pine case study [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.56j8vq8

Abstract

We evaluate genomic data, relative to phenotypic and climatic data, as a basis for assisted gene flow and genetic conservation. Using a common garden trial of 281 lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) provenances from across western Canada, we compare genomic data to phenotypic and climatic data to assess their effectiveness in characterizing the climatic drivers and spatial scale of local adaptation in this species. We find that phenotype-associated loci are equivalent or slightly superior to climate data for describing local adaptation in seedling traits, but that climate data is superior to bulk genomic data that have not been selected for phenotypic associations. We also find agreement between the climate variables associated with genomic variation and with 20-year heights from a long-term provenance trial, suggesting that genomic data may be a viable option for identifying climatic drivers of local adaptation where phenotypic data are unavailable. Genetic clines associated with the experimental traits occur at broad spatial scales, suggesting that standing variation of adaptive alleles for this and similar species does not require management at scales finer than are indicated by phenotypic data. This study demonstrates that genomic data are most useful when paired with phenotypic data, but can also fill some of the traditional roles of phenotypic data in management of species for which phenotypic trials are not feasible.

Usage notes

Location

Alberta
Western Canada
British Columbia