Gene Flow and Local Adaptation in Trees
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Abstract
Populations are locally adapted when populations have the highest relative fitness at their home sites, and lower fitness in other parts of the range. Results from the extensive experimental plantations of populations of forest trees from different parts of the range show that populations can survive and grow in broad areas outside the home site. However, intra- and interspecific competition limit the distribution of genotypes. For populations from large parts of the range, relative fitness, compared with the local population, is often highest at the home site. At the edges of the range, this local adaptation may break down. The extent of local adaptation is determined by the balance between gene flow and…
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3Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Local adaptation
- Biological dispersal
- Biology
- Gene flow
- Adaptation (eye)
- Range (aeronautics)
- Selection (genetic algorithm)
- Interspecific competition
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Climate action
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