Back to Search Start Over

A generalist-specialist trade-off between switchgrass cytotypes impacts climate adaptation and geographic range

Authors :
Joseph D. Napier
Paul P. Grabowski
John T. Lovell
Jason Bonnette
Sujan Mamidi
Maria Jose Gomez-Hughes
Acer VanWallendael
Xiaoyu Weng
Lori H. Handley
Min K. Kim
Arvid R. Boe
Philip A. Fay
Felix B. Fritschi
Julie D. Jastrow
John Lloyd-Reilley
David B. Lowry
Roser Matamala
Robert B. Mitchell
Francis M. Rouquette
Yanqi Wu
Jenell Webber
Teresa Jones
Kerrie Barry
Jane Grimwood
Jeremy Schmutz
Thomas E. Juenger
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 119(15)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Polyploidy results from whole-genome duplication and is a unique form of heritable variation with pronounced evolutionary implications. Different ploidy levels, or cytotypes, can exist within a single species, and such systems provide an opportunity to assess how ploidy variation alters phenotypic novelty, adaptability, and fitness, which can, in turn, drive the development of unique ecological niches that promote the coexistence of multiple cytotypes. Switchgrass, Panicum virgatum, is a widespread, perennial C4 grass in North America with multiple naturally occurring cytotypes, primarily tetraploids (4×) and octoploids (8×). Using a combination of genomic, quantitative genetic, landscape, and niche modeling approaches, we detect divergent levels of genetic admixture, evidence of niche differentiation, and differential environmental sensitivity between switchgrass cytotypes. Taken together, these findings support a generalist (8×)–specialist (4×) trade-off. Our results indicate that the 8× represent a unique combination of genetic variation that has allowed the expansion of switchgrass’ ecological niche and thus putatively represents a valuable breeding resource.

Details

ISSN :
10916490
Volume :
119
Issue :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ddf279db3b1fa3c802876d2d6cfe0c8e