Landscape genomics of a grassland plant Primula veris in fragmented alvar grasslands of Estonia
Aavik, T., Reinula, I., Helm, A., Hernández-Agramonte, I. M. and Träger, S. (2018). Landscape genomics of a grassland plant Primula veris in fragmented alvar grasslands of Estonia. 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. doi: 10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107294
Authors
Date
2018Copyright
© the Authors, 2018
Loss and fragmentation of natural and semi-natural habitats is one of the major threats to genetic diversity. Lowered genetic diversity, in turn, may jeopardize the ability of fragmented populations to respond to environmental perturbations, such as climate change and pollution.
Significant advances in molecular tools during recent years have provided researchers with unprecedented insight not only into patterns of neutral genetic diversity of wild populations, but is now allowing to quantify variation at those regions of the genome, which are affected by natural selection, i.e. adaptive genetic variation. Information on genetic diversity of adaptive relevance helps to predict the vulnerability of wild species to ongoing climate change and significantly facilitates organising conservation of populations in environmentally dynamic habitats. Nevertheless, studies applying such high-throughput genomic tools are still rare in conservation biology.
We examined the genomic diversity of 42 populations of Primula veris (20 individuals per population), an insect-pollinated plant species characteristic of calcareous grasslands, in alvar grasslands of Western Estonia. Alvar grasslands are characterised by high plant species richness and unique species composition, but have suffered from severe decrease in area and connectivity during the last hundred years, and hence represent habitats with high conservation importance. These grasslands are thus a good study system for examining the impact of recent landscape change on biodiversity.
To assess genetic diversity of the study populations, we use nearly 5000 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) obtained through restriction site associated DNA sequencing (RADseq). In addition to current landscape characteristics, we obtained detailed historic information on alvar area and connectivity and surrounding landscape characteristics in 1930s. Furthermore, we have collected a detailed set of various environmental variables at study locations, which help to determine key drivers of local adaptation in our study system. Preliminary evidence indicates that current patterns of genomic diversity in Primula veris may exhibit a delayed response to landscape change. We are convinced that our project, which has been carried out in close collaboration with conservation practitioners, will help to propose effective measures for conservation of fragmented plant populations in the light of environmental changes.
...
Publisher
Open Science Centre, University of JyväskyläConference
ECCB2018: 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. 12th - 15th of June 2018, Jyväskylä, Finland
Original source
https://peerageofscience.org/conference/eccb2018/107294/Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
- ECCB 2018 [712]
License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
A promising new tool for enhancing grassland biodiversity in fragmented landscapes: high-diversity sowing in establishment gaps
Valkó, Orsolya; Deák, Balázs; Török, Péter; Kirmer, Anita; Tischew, Sabine; Kelemen, András; Tóth, Katalin; Miglécz, Tamás; Radócz, Szilvia; Sonkoly, Judit; Tóth, Edina; Kiss, Réka; Lukács, Katalin; Körmöczi, Zsófia; Kapocsi, István; Tóthmérész, Béla (Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä, 2018)Halting the loss of grassland biodiversity and restoring degraded ecosystems are high priority tasks in the fragmented landscapes. In fragmented landscapes there are limited amount of propagule sources of grassland specialist ... -
Slow response of grassland specialists to habitat fragmentation in well-connected calcareous grasslands
Löffler, Franz; Poniatowski, Dominik; Fartmannn, Thomas (Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä, 2018)Due to the transition from traditional land use to modern agriculture throughout Europe, semi-natural grasslands are subject to severe environmental changes. Both agricultural intensification and abandonment have caused ... -
Loss in grassland plant diversity linked to landscape-wide land-use intensity rather than landscape structure
Ekroos, Johan (Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä, 2018)Grazed semi-natural pastures provide keystone habitats for biodiversity in agricultural landscapes dominated by intensively managed land. However, such pastures are frequently isolated and embedded in intensively managed ... -
Large-scale grassland restoration in Estonia – best practice and socio-economic implications
Kasari, Liis; Esko, Annely; Prangel, Elisabeth; Hernández-Agramonte, Ignacio M.; Helm, Aveliina (Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä, 2018)In the beginning of 20th century, 1/3 of mainland area of Estonia – 18 000 km2 – was covered by semi-natural grasslands. Since then, similarly to all other regions in Europe, changes in land-use resulted in abandonment and ... -
The role of landscape, topography, and geodiversity in explaining vascular plant species richness in a fragmented landscape
Räsänen, Aleksi; Kuitunen, Markku; Hjort, Jan; Vaso, Asta; Kuitunen, Tuomo; Lensu, Anssi (Suomen Ympäristökeskus, 2016)We explained vascular plant species richness patterns in a 286 km2 fragmented landscape with a notable human influence. The objective of this study was two-fold: to test the relative importance of landscape, topography ...