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Cold adaptation recorded in tree rings highlights risks associated with climate change and assisted migration.

David MontwéMiriam Isaac-RentonAndreas HamannHeinrich Spiecker
Published in: Nature communications (2018)
With lengthening growing seasons but increased temperature variability under climate change, frost damage to plants may remain a risk and could be exacerbated by poleward planting of warm-adapted seed sources. Here, we study cold adaptation of tree populations in a wide-ranging coniferous species in western North America to inform limits to seed transfer. Using tree-ring signatures of cold damage from common garden trials designed to study genetic population differentiation, we find opposing geographic clines for spring frost and fall frost damage. Provenances from northern regions are sensitive to spring frosts, while the more productive provenances from central and southern regions are more susceptible to fall frosts. Transferring the southern, warm-adapted genotypes northward causes a significant loss of growth and a permanent rank change after a spring frost event. We conclude that cold adaptation should remain an important consideration when implementing seed transfers designed to mitigate harmful effects of climate change.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • human health
  • oxidative stress
  • genome wide
  • drinking water
  • risk assessment
  • south africa
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • genetic diversity