Major new international research involving Monash University has found that despite 140 million years of independent evolution, two distinct types of coniferous trees use the same small set of 47 genes (of 23000) to rapidly adapt to varying climates.
Monash University Scientist Dr Kay Hodgins said the finding was astonishing with implications for sustainability, industry and research.
“Despite the fact these trees have evolved as separate species for roughly as long as humans and kangaroos, these two distantly-related types of trees use variation in the same genes to deal with the different climates they both inhabit,” Dr Hodgins said. “Understanding how trees adapt to climate will help us make better decisions about where trees should be planted.”
Dr Hodgins said trees are becoming mismatched to their local climates, which is becoming an issue.
This research has major significance for trees, the ongoing human consumption of wood and pulp products such as paper and fibre as well as how nations address climate change.
Senior author, Forestry Professor Sally Aitken, from the University of British Columbia said that faced with drought or cold, trees decide to turn thousands of genes on or off to deal with changes in temperature and moisture. This suggests there may be multiple ways trees in a region can adapt to local climate.
“But after sequencing the DNA of 23,000 specific genes from hundreds of pine and spruce trees in B.C. and Alberta, our research found that the two tree species used DNA variation in the same 47 genes to adapt to low or high temperatures,” said Professor Aitken.
Links
- Monash researchers help discover genetic secret for climate change defence in trees
- Convergent local adaptation to climate in distantly related conifer
- Climate change makes a comeback – with the help of social media
- There is one thing the Coalition can do for climate change that Labor cannot
- UFOs, climate change and missing airliners: how to separate fact from fiction
No comments :
Post a Comment