Published January 7, 2021 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Prospects for the natural distribution of crop wild-relatives with limited adaptability: The case of the wild pea Pisum fulvum

  • 1. Hebrew University of Jerusalem
  • 2. Agricultural Research Organization

Description

Plant breeders and conservationists depend on knowledge about the genetic variation of their species of interest. Pisum fulvum, a wild relative of domesticated pea, has attracted attention as a genetic resource for crop improvement, yet little information about its diversity in the wild has been published hitherto. We sampled 15 populations of P. fulvum from Israeli natural habitats and conducted genotyping by sequencing to analyse their genetic diversity and adaptive state. We also attempted to evaluate the species past demography and the prospects of its future reaction to environmental changes. The results suggest that genetic diversity of P. fulvum is low to medium and is distributed between well diverged populations. Surprisingly, with 56 % in the total population, the selfing rate was found to be significantly lower than expected from a species that is commonly assumed to be a predominant selfer. We found a strong genetic bottleneck during the last glacial period and only limited patterns of isolation by distance and environment, which explained 13 % - 18 % of the genetic variation. Despite the weak signatures of genome-wide IBE, 1354 markers were significantly correlated with environmental factors, 1233 of which were located within known genes with a nonsynonymous to synonymous ratio of 0.382. Species distribution modelling depicted an ongoing fragmentation and decreased habitable area over the next 80 years under two different socio-economic pathways. Our results suggest that complex interactions of substantial drift and selection shaped the genome of P. fulvum. Climate change is likely to cause further erosion of genetic diversity in P. fulvum. Systematic ex-situ conservation may be advisable to safeguard genetic variability for future utilization of this species.

Notes

Funding provided by: Israel Science Foundation
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100003977
Award Number: 307/17

Files

Files (1.7 GB)

Name Size Download all
md5:95b8ec46ed1f31b89f984ce80932f11d
49.4 MB Download
md5:10021704e443a456e3e6d1eb2bfc71d6
78.0 MB Download
md5:cc7454a3f781e8684190fdd6b1979f5b
596.9 MB Download
md5:b1e4c6fd06a05ae074953733bc6ffdd8
947.3 MB Download

Additional details

Related works