2018
DOI: 10.1111/mec.14800
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Evolutionary dynamics of quantitative variation in an adaptive trait at the regional scale: The case of zinc hyperaccumulation in Arabidopsis halleri

Abstract: Metal hyperaccumulation in plants is an ecological trait whose biological significance remains debated, in particular because the selective pressures that govern its evolutionary dynamics are complex. One of the possible causes of quantitative variation in hyperaccumulation may be local adaptation to metalliferous soils. Here, we explored the population genetic structure of Arabidopsis halleri at fourteen metalliferous and nonmetalliferous sampling sites in southern Poland. The results were integrated with a q… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(22 citation statements)
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References 103 publications
(173 reference statements)
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“…Regulation of elemental uptake, including processes of exclusion, accumulation, and hyperaccumulation, has broad implications for plant biochemistry, physiology, ecology, and evolution. The extreme elemental concentrations found in hyperaccumulators have made them useful systems for study of nutrient acquisition, transport, and homeostasis (van der Ent et al., ), plant–herbivore interactions (Boyd, ), plant–pathogen interactions (Hörger et al., ), and evolutionary dynamics (Babst‐Kostecka et al., ), to name a few examples. Hyperaccumulation may also have applied significance in the development of biotechnology such as phytoremediation (Chaney et al., ) and agromining (van der Ent et al., ; Chaney et al., ; Kidd et al., ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Regulation of elemental uptake, including processes of exclusion, accumulation, and hyperaccumulation, has broad implications for plant biochemistry, physiology, ecology, and evolution. The extreme elemental concentrations found in hyperaccumulators have made them useful systems for study of nutrient acquisition, transport, and homeostasis (van der Ent et al., ), plant–herbivore interactions (Boyd, ), plant–pathogen interactions (Hörger et al., ), and evolutionary dynamics (Babst‐Kostecka et al., ), to name a few examples. Hyperaccumulation may also have applied significance in the development of biotechnology such as phytoremediation (Chaney et al., ) and agromining (van der Ent et al., ; Chaney et al., ; Kidd et al., ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1 ). Arabidopsis halleri populations from these four locations hypertolerate and hyperaccumulate TMEs 9 , 21 . However, the history and soil composition of the four sites differ.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, we think that this is counterbalanced by the categorical sampling design (replicated populations of M and NM sites) and the strong selection pressure that such TME-enriched soils exert on plants, complemented by the genome-wide perspective. Furthermore, the selected populations exhibit a wide range of TME concentrations in plant shoots and represent the genetic diversity and recently refined population genetic structure of A. halleri in southern Poland 21 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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