Introduction to the Special Issue: The ecology and genetics of population differentiation in plants
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Oxford University Press
Materia
Common garden experiments Epigenetics Local adaptation Molecular markers Next-generation sequencing Phenotypic plasticity Quantitative traits
Fecha
2021-09-06Referencia bibliográfica
F Xavier Picó, Mohamed Abdelaziz, Antonio R Castilla, Introduction to the Special Issue: The ecology and genetics of population differentiation in plants, AoB PLANTS, Volume 13, Issue 6, December 2021, plab057, [https://doi.org/10.1093/aobpla/plab057]
Patrocinador
Spanish Government PID2019-104135GB-I00 PID2019-111294GB-I00; European Regional Development Fund (FEDER, UE); Organismo Autonomo de Parques Nacionales of Spain 2415/2017; Portuguese FCT postdoctoral fellowship SFRH/BPD/115781/2016Resumen
Population differentiation is a pervasive process in nature. At present, evolutionary studies on plant population
differentiation address key questions by undertaking joint ecological and genetic approaches and employing a combination
of molecular and experimental means. In this special issue, we gathered a collection of papers dealing with various
ecological and genetic aspects of population differentiation in plants. In particular, this special issue encompasses eight
research articles and two reviews covering a wide array of worldwide environments, plant functional types, genetic and
genomic approaches, and common garden experiments to quantify molecular and/or quantitative trait differentiation
in plant populations. Overall, this special issue stresses the validity of traditional evolutionary studies focused on plant
populations, whilst emphasizing the integration of classical biological disciplines and state-of-the-art molecular techniques
into a unique toolkit for evolutionary plant research.