| Literature DB >> 26500675 |
Michael B Kantar1, Chrystian C Sosa2, Colin K Khoury3, Nora P Castañeda-Álvarez4, Harold A Achicanoy2, Vivian Bernau5, Nolan C Kane6, Laura Marek7, Gerald Seiler8, Loren H Rieseberg9.
Abstract
Crop wild relatives (CWR) are a rich source of genetic diversity for crop improvement. Combining ecogeographic and phylogenetic techniques can inform both conservation and breeding. Geographic occurrence, bioclimatic, and biophysical data were used to predict species distributions, range overlap and niche occupancy in 36 taxa closely related to sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.). Taxa lacking comprehensive ex situ conservation were identified. The predicted distributions for 36 Helianthus taxa identified substantial range overlap, range asymmetry and niche conservatism. Specific taxa (e.g., Helianthus deblis Nutt., Helianthus anomalus Blake, and Helianthus divaricatus L.) were identified as targets for traits of interest, particularly for abiotic stress tolerance, and adaptation to extreme soil properties. The combination of techniques demonstrates the potential for publicly available ecogeographic and phylogenetic data to facilitate the identification of possible sources of abiotic stress traits for plant breeding programs. Much of the primary genepool (wild H. annuus) occurs in extreme environments indicating that introgression of targeted traits may be relatively straightforward. Sister taxa in Helianthus have greater range overlap than more distantly related taxa within the genus. This adds to a growing body of literature suggesting that in plants (unlike some animal groups), geographic isolation may not be necessary for speciation.Entities:
Keywords: climate change; conservation; crop wild relatives; ecological niche modeling; plant breeding; plant genetic resources; publicly available data sources
Year: 2015 PMID: 26500675 PMCID: PMC4597133 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2015.00841
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Taxa examined in this study, recommendation, position in germplasm, environmental cluster, life history, and potential extreme characteristics.
| Assessed to be well represented | Primary | NA | Cluster 1 | Annual | NA | |
| High priority | Secondary | Utah New Mexico | Cluster 3 | Annual | Low precipitation tolerance Tolerance to high pH | |
| Medium priority | Secondary | Texas | Cluster 1 | Annual | High temperature tolerance | |
| Tolerance to high clay content | ||||||
| Medium priority | Tertiary | Arizona New Mexico | Cluster 3 | Perennial | Response to stochastic climate Low precipitation tolerance Tolerance to low bulk density | |
| Medium priority | Tertiary | No overlap | Cluster 2 | Perennial | Tolerance to low | |
| Cation-exchange capacity | ||||||
| Tolerance of high precipitation | ||||||
| Tolerance to low pH | ||||||
| High priority | Secondary | California | Cluster 1 | Annual | Tolerance to erratic precipitation | |
| Low precipitation tolerance | ||||||
| High priority | Secondary | East Texas | Cluster 2 | Annual | High temperature tolerance | |
| Medium priority | Secondary | No overlap | Cluster 2 | Annual | High temperature tolerance | |
| Tolerance of high precipitation | ||||||
| Tolerance to low clay content | ||||||
| Medium priority | Secondary | No overlap | Cluster 2 | Annual | Tolerance to high clay content | |
| Assessed to be well represented | Secondary | No overlap | Cluster 2 | Annual | Tolerance of high precipitation Tolerance to low clay content | |
| Low priority | Secondary | No overlap | Cluster 2 | Annual | High temperature tolerance Tolerance of high precipitation | |
| Tolerance to low clay content | ||||||
| High priority | Secondary | Nevada | Cluster 3 | Annual | Response to stochastic climate | |
| Utah | Low precipitation tolerance | |||||
| New Mexico | ||||||
| High priority | Tertiary | Central US | Cluster 2 | Perennial | Perennial habit | |
| Tolerance to low pH | ||||||
| Medium priority | Secondary | California | Cluster 1 | Annual | Tolerance to erratic precipitation | |
| Low precipitation tolerance | ||||||
| Low bulk density | ||||||
| High priority | Tertiary | No overlap | Cluster 2 | Perennial | Tolerance of high precipitation | |
| Medium priority | Tertiary | Central US | Cluster 3 | Perennial | Tolerance to erratic temperature | |
| High priority | Tertiary | Central US | Cluster 2 | Perennial | Tolerance to low pH | |
| High priority | Tertiary | Central US | Cluster 3 | Perennial | Low temperature tolerance | |
| Tolerance to erratic temperature | ||||||
| Assessed to be well represented | Secondary | New Mexico | Cluster 1 | Annual | Low organic carbon content | |
| High priority | Secondary | California | Cluster 1 | Annual | High temperature tolerance | |
| High priority | Secondary | Baja California | Cluster 1 | Perennial | Low precipitation tolerance | |
| High priority | Secondary | California, Mexico (Sonora) | Cluster 1 | Perennial Sometime Annual | High temperature tolerance low Precipitation tolerance | |
| Assessed to be well represented | Secondary | Texas, New Mexico | Cluster 1 | Annual | Low organic carbon content | |
| High priority | Tertiary | Central US | Cluster 3 | Perennial | Tolerance to erratic temperature | |
| High priority | Tertiary | Central US | Cluster 3 | Perennial | Low temperature tolerance Tolerance to erratic temperature | |
| High priority | Secondary | Western US | Cluster 3 | Annual | Tolerance to erratic temperature | |
| High priority | Secondary | Central US | Cluster 3 | Annual | Tolerance to erratic temperature Low temperature tolerance | |
| Assessed to be well represented | Secondary | West Texas | Cluster 1 | Annual | High temperature tolerance | |
| Assessed to be well represented | Secondary | East Texas | Cluster 2 | Annual | Tolerance to erratic temperature | |
| Low priority | Secondary | Texas | Cluster 1 | Annual | Tolerance of high bulk density | |
| Medium priority | Tertiary | No overlap | Cluster 2 | Perennial | Tolerance of high precipitation | |
| Tolerance to low | ||||||
| Cation exchange capacity Tolerance to low pH | ||||||
| Medium priority | Tertiary | Oklahoma Kansas Arkansas Missouri | Cluster 3 | Perennial | Tolerance to high clay content | |
| Assessed to be well represented | Tertiary | Oklahoma Arkansas Missouri | Cluster 2 | Perennial | Tolerance to low cation-exchange capacity | |
| High priority | Tertiary | Central US | Cluster 2 | Perennial | Tolerance of high precipitation | |
| Medium priority | Secondary | Central US | Cluster 2 | Perennial | Low temperature tolerance | |
| High priority | Primary | California | Cluster 1 | Perennial | High temperature tolerance |
Figure 1Synthesis of gap analysis results and expert assessments for each of the 36 . Taxa are listed by descending priority for further collecting by category: HPS, high priority taxa; MPS, medium priority taxa; LPS, low priority taxa; NFCR, no further collecting recommended. The final priority scores (FPS, black circle) is the mean of the sampling representativeness score (SRS, blue circle), geographic representativeness score (GRS, red circle), and ecological representativeness score (ERS, green circle).
Figure 2Map of North America showing (A) taxon richness of sunflower and (B) hotspots for further collecting of high priority taxa.
Figure 3(A) Geographic niche overlap based on ecogeographic variables, Schoener's D (above diagonal) and modified Hellinger's I (below diagonal). Taxa are grouped by phylogenetic relationship. Values range from 0 (no overlap; purple) to 1 (complete overlap; orange); (B) Occurrence points for assessed taxa grouped based on the first three principle components of biophysical and bioclimatic variables. Clusters share homogeneous bioclimatic and biophysical conditions.
Environmental Niche occupancy based on Schoener (.
| All taxa | 36.9 | 69.4 | 4.7 |
| Annual taxa | 32.2 | 36.6 | 6.6 |
| Perennial taxa | 19.8 | 85.7 | 2.2 |
| Allopatric taxa | 54.2 | 62.5 | 4.3 |
| Sympatric taxa | 3.3 | 83.3 | 2.6 |
| Sister taxa | 33.3 | 57.7 | 2.6 |
Figure 4Climatic niches for (A) mean diurnal range and annual precipitation, (B) Soil pH and mean annual precipitation, (C) mean diurnal range and annual precipitation. Niches per taxa represent the middle 90% of occurrence points, i.e., 10% outliers are not included. Red boxes show the niche of wild H. annuus and black boxes show the niche of cultivated H. annuus in North America.
Figure 5Test of phylogenetic signal utilizing the . K measures phylogenetic signal in traits, where K-values below 1 indicates low dependence of traits on evolutionary history (not conserved between taxa) and K-values above 1 indicates trait conservation over evolutionary history (traits conserved over evolutionary time). *indicates K significantly greater than 1 (p < 0.05).