‘Chimes of resilience’: what makes forest trees genetically resilient?
Langue
en
Article de revue
Ce document a été publié dans
New Phytologist. 2025-04-07, vol. 246, n° 5, p. 1934 - 1951
Wiley
Résumé en anglais
<div><p>Forest trees are foundation species of many ecosystems and are challenged by global environmental changes. We assemble genetic facts and arguments supporting or undermining resilient responses of forest trees to ...Lire la suite >
<div><p>Forest trees are foundation species of many ecosystems and are challenged by global environmental changes. We assemble genetic facts and arguments supporting or undermining resilient responses of forest trees to those changes. Genetic resilience is understood here as the capacity of a species to restore its adaptive potential following environmental changes and disturbances. Importantly, the data come primarily from European temperate tree species with large distributions and consider only marginally species with small distributions. We first examine historical trajectories of trees during repeated climatic changes. Species that survived the Pliocene-Pleistocene transition and underwent the oscillations of glacial and interglacial periods were equipped with life history traits enhancing persistence and resilience. Evidence of their resilience also comes from the maintenance of large effective population sizes across time and rapid microevolutionary responses to recent climatic events. We then review genetic mechanisms and attributes shaping resilient responses. Usually, invoked constraints to resilience, such as genetic load or generation time and overlap, have limited consequences or are offset by positive impacts. Conversely, genetic plasticity, gene flow, introgression, genetic architecture of fitness-related traits and demographic dynamics strengthen resilience by accelerating adaptive responses. Finally, we address the limitations of this review and highlight critical research gaps.</p></div>< Réduire
Mots clés en anglais
effective population size
forest trees
gene flow
genetic resilience
local adaptation
Quaternary
Origine
Importé de halUnités de recherche