To collect 20-30 viable acorns from each of 8 mature valley oak trees for provenance tests and landscape genomics research. We collected some green acorns on our last visit a few weeks ago, but we would like to return to get more mature acorns too. Abstract: Climate change has already begun to impact species and ecosystems throughout the world by altering local climate conditions and shifting current climate zones. This rapid change is of particular concern for long-lived tree species that define the ecosystem they occupy and shape local biodiversity. Here, we use cutting-edge genomic tools to investigate geographic patterns of genetic and phenotypic variation in a keystone endemic oak species of California, valley oak (Quercus lobata N?e), and assess how the underlying genetic structure of populations might influence this species? ability to survive climate change. Local adaptation across many traits is likely to create geographic structure in traits associated with response to climate. By sampling populations through the species? range, we propose to test the association of and phenotypic variation with climate gradients. Specifically, we will use a reference transcriptome to identify candidate genes associated with functional traits for response to climate change, test for SNPs under selection by association with geographical and environmental gradients after controlling for background historical genetic structure, and then map the SNPs associated with these genes onto phenotypic traits measured in a greenhouse experiment. This project will provide a rigorous assessment of the extent to which spatial patterns in adaptive genetic and phenotypic variation might influence response to future climates.

Visit #26635 @Sedgwick Reserve

Approved

Under Project # 23311 | Research

California oak phylogeography and genomics

research_scientist - University of California, Los Angeles


Reservation Members(s)

Group of 2 Research Scientist/Post Doc Nov 1 - 2, 2011 (2 days)

Reserve Resources(s) | Create Invoice

Ranch House Not Available 2 Nov 1 - 2, 2011