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Understanding how tree species will respond to a future climate requires reliable and quantitative estimates of intra-specific variation under current climate conditions. We studied three 10-year-old common garden experiments established across a rainfall and drought gradient planted with nearly 10,000 pedunculate oak ( L.) trees from ten provenances with known family structure. We aimed at disentangling adaptive and plastic responses for growth (height and diameter at breast height) as well as for leaf and wood functional traits related to adaptation to dry environments. We used restricted maximum likelihood approaches to assess additive genetic variation expressed as narrow-sense heritability (h), quantitative trait differentiation among provenances (Q), and genotype-by-environment interactions (GxE). We found strong and significant patterns of local adaptation in growth in all three common gardens, suggesting that transfer of seed material should not exceed a climatic distance of approximately 1°C under current climatic conditions, while transfer along precipitation gradients seems to be less stringent. Moreover, heritability reached 0.64 for tree height and 0.67 for dbh at the dry margin of the testing spectrum, suggesting significant additive genetic variation of potential use for future selection and tree breeding. GxE interactions in growth were significant and explained less phenotypic variation than origin of seed source (4% versus 10%). Functional trait variation among provenances was partly related to drought regimes at provenances origins but had moderate explanatory power for growth. We conclude that directional selection, either naturally or through breeding, is the most likely and feasible outcome for pedunculate oak to adapt to warmer and drier climate conditions in the future.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.13034 | DOI Listing |
Evol Appl
August 2025
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew Richmond Surrey UK.
The United Kingdom aims to dramatically accelerate the establishment of new woodlands by 2050, yet the impact of different afforestation strategies on landscape genetic diversity and resilience remains unclear. This study integrates environmental data, whole-genome sequencing and phenotypic assessments to compare bioclimatic envelopes, genetic diversity and plant health indicators in naturally colonised versus planted populations of pedunculate oak and silver birch. We found that registered seed stands significantly under-represent the wild bioclimatic envelopes of both species, as well as those of 21 out of 39 UK native species assessed, potentially limiting adaptive diversity in planted populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Plant Biol
August 2025
Wawrzyniak Institute of Dendrology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Parkowa 5, Kórnik, 62‑035, Poland.
Background: In vitro rooting remains a challenge for many woody species, including Quercus robur. While auxins combined with activated charcoal (AC) have traditionally been used, Q. robur explants exhibit a strong dependence on cytokinins (CKs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFG3 (Bethesda)
August 2025
Department of Molecular Biology, Max Planck Institute for Biology Tübingen, Tübingen 72076, Germany.
Somatic mutations are particularly relevant for long-lived organisms. Sources of somatic mutations include imperfect DNA repair, replication errors, and exogenous damage such as ultraviolet radiation. A previous study estimated a surprisingly low number of somatic mutations in a 234-year-old individual of the pedunculate oak (Quercus robur), known as the Napoleon Oak.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
June 2025
Thünen Institute of Forest Genetics, Grosshansdorf, Germany.
Origin tracking is important to ensure use of the right seed source and trade with legally harvested timber. Additionally, it can help to reconstruct human-caused historical long-distance seed transfer and to spot mislabelling in forest field trials. So far, genetic assignment approaches were mostly discrete, assigning test samples to predefined groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Biol (Stuttg)
May 2025
Chair for Forest Growth and Yield Science, Department of Life Science Systems, TUM School of Life Sciences, Technical University of Munich, Freising, Germany.
The increasing severity and frequency of droughts will play a pivotal role in shaping future forest ecosystems worldwide. Trees growing in mixtures are thought to be less susceptible to drought stress, but evidence for such positive admixture effects remains limited. This study examines how interspecific neighbourhood structures affect the growth responses of pine and oak species under recurrent drought stress in two contrasting forest ecosystems.
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