24714 Detecting Local Adaptation for Rhizosphere Acidification in a Wild Deciduous Azalea Species

Tuesday, August 9, 2016: 9:00 AM
Macon Room (Sheraton Hotel Atlanta)
Alexander Susko , University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN
Jim Bradeen, Department Head , University of Minnesota, St Paul, MN
Timothy A. Rinehart , USDA-ARS, SHL, Poplarville, MS, United States
Stan C. Hokanson , University of Minnesota, St Paul, MN
Measures of genetic differentiation provide useful benchmarks by which to compare quantitative trait differentiation in woody species. These analyses, typically known as Qst-Fst comparisons, can infer whether a quantitative trait is locally adapted in a population. Such experiments produce not only ecological insights, but useful breeding directions and identify new germplasm sources for quantitative traits of interest. We set out to determine the genetic differentiation in a wide-ranging deciduous azalea Rhododendron viscosum (L.) Torr, a species of breeding interest due to its late bloom and general abiotic stress tolerance. We identified seven broad subpopulations across the southern United States from Arkansas to Florida encompassing a variety of environments. We developed 14 SSR loci from a sequenced R. viscosum bud transcriptome for estimations of subpopulation genetic differentiation based on Fst and Rst statistics. We compared this to the quantitative trait differentiation of rhizosphere acidification, a candidate trait for pH adaptability in deciduous azalea. To determine if rhizosphere acidification was locally adapted, we estimated the trait Qst value, or ratio of trait additive variance among versus within subpopulations, from the progeny of 19 maternal half-sib families. Though rhizosphere acidificaiton was not locally adapted, we consider this research to be a blueprint for investigating novel, quantitative traits in uncharacterized woody species.