Description
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Abstract When confronted with an adaptive challenge, such as extreme temperature, closely related species frequently evolve similar phenotypes using the same genes. Although such repeated evolution is thought to be less likely in highly polygenic traits and distantly related species, this has not been tested at the genome scale. We performed a population genomic study of convergent local adaptation among two distantly related species, lodgepole pine and interior spruce. We identified a suite of 47 genes, enriched for duplicated genes, with variants associated with spatial variation in temperature or cold hardiness in both species, providing evidence of convergent local adaptation despite 140 million years of separate evolution. These results show that adaptation to climate can be genetically constrained, with certain key genes playing nonredundant roles. (2020-06-24)
Usage notes Data_archive_part1This archive contains all of the intermediate data files and R-scripts needed to generate the main figures and most of the supplementary materials. The original sequence data are stored on the Short Read Archive.yeaman_pine_spruce_convergence_archive.tbz Data_archive_part2This contains the second part of the data (too large for a single file upload)yeaman_pine_spruce_convergence_archive2.tbz (2020-06-24)
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Notes
| Dryad version number: 1
Version status: submitted
Dryad curation status: Published
Sharing link: https://datadryad.org/stash/share/4wQq3z17oSDdT0rT-_IGksxxi5z2ScJDNjqXflonL8s
Storage size: 1504383555
Visibility: public |