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http://documenta.ciemat.es/handle/123456789/5588
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| Título : | Evaluating Assisted Gene Flow in Marginal Populations of a High Mountain Species |
| Autor : | Prieto-Benítez, Samuel Morente-López, Javier Rubio-Teso, María Luisa Lara-Romero, Carlos García-Fernández, Alfredo Torres, Elena Iriondo, José María |
| Palabras clave : | Silene, facilitated adaptation, gene flow, marginal populations, outbreeding, climate change, flowering phenology |
| Fecha de publicación : | 26-ene-2026 |
| Resumen : | Many species cannot either migrate or adapt at the rate of temperature increases due to
climate warming. Therefore, they need active conservation strategies to avoid extinction.
Facilitated adaptation actions, such assisted gene flow, aim at the increase of the
evolutionary resilience of species affected by global change. In elevational gradients,
marginal populations at the lower elevation edges are experiencing earlier snowmelt
and higher temperatures, which force them to adapt to the new conditions by modifying
their phenology. In this context, advancing the onset of flowering and seed germination
times are crucial to ensure reproductive success and increase seedling survival prior to
summer drought. Assisted gene flow may bring adaptive alleles and increase genetic
diversity that can help throughout ontogeny. The main aim of this work is to assess
the effects that different gene flow treatments could have on the desired trait changes
in marginal populations. Accordingly, we established a common garden experiment
in which we assayed four different gene flow treatments between Silene ciliata Pourr.
(Caryophyllaceae) populations located in similar and different elevation edges, belonging
to the same and different mountains. As a control treatment, within-population crosses
of low elevation edge populations were performed. The resulting seeds were sown and
the germination and flowering onset dates of the resulting plants recorded, as well as
the seedling survival. Gene flow between populations falling on the same mountain and
same elevation and gene flow from high-elevation populations from a different mountain
to low-elevation populations advanced seed germination time with respect to control
crosses. No significant effects of gene flow on seedling survival were found. All the gene
flow treatments delayed the onset of flowering with respect to control crosses and this
effect was more pronounced in among-mountain gene flows. The results of this study
highlight two important issues that should be thoroughly studied before attempting to
apply assisted gene flow in practical conservation situations. Firstly, among-populations
gene flow can trigger different responses in crucial traits throughout the ontogeny of
plant species. Secondly, the population provenance of gene flow is determinant and
plays a significant role on the effects of gene flow. |
| URI : | https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14855/5588 |
| Aparece en las colecciones: | Artículos de Medio Ambiente
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