Evolutionary Genomics Provides Insights Into Endangerment and Conservation of a Wild Apple Tree Species, Malus sieversii

ABSTRACT Understanding the evolutionary history of a species is essential for effective conservation management. Malus sieversii, a relict broad‐leaf forest tree found in arid Central Asian mountains, has a narrow and fragmented distribution and is classified as an endangered species in China. This...

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Main Authors: Jian Zhang, Fang‐Yuan Zhao, Hong‐Xiang Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-12-01
Series:Evolutionary Applications
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.70048
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author Jian Zhang
Fang‐Yuan Zhao
Hong‐Xiang Zhang
author_facet Jian Zhang
Fang‐Yuan Zhao
Hong‐Xiang Zhang
author_sort Jian Zhang
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT Understanding the evolutionary history of a species is essential for effective conservation management. Malus sieversii, a relict broad‐leaf forest tree found in arid Central Asian mountains, has a narrow and fragmented distribution and is classified as an endangered species in China. This species is considered one of the ancestors of the domesticated apple trees. In the present study, we sampled five populations of M. sieversii and its wide‐ranging congener M. baccata from China. Through deep whole‐genome resequencing, we analyzed the population's genetic diversity, genetic structure, demographic history, fixation of deleterious mutations, and genomic divergence. Our results revealed that M. baccata exhibits a higher level of genetic diversity than M. sieversii. The effective population size of M. sieversii decreased, whereas that of M. baccata recovered after the bottleneck effect. In M. sieversii, the genetic structure of the Yili region was distinct from that of the Tacheng region. Populations at the rear edge of the Tacheng region showed a stronger fixation of deleterious mutations than those in the Yili region. Genomic divergence indicated that the positively selected genes were associated with physiological processes within the genomic islands between the Yili and Tacheng regions. Based on these findings, we recommend the establishment of two separate conservation units for the Yili and Tacheng lineages to preserve their genetic resources. Given the limited distribution range and high fixation rate of deleterious mutations, urgent protective measures are recommended for the Tacheng lineage.
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spelling doaj-art-b848117a96ac4d2b9b87989cae631ae72025-01-29T07:57:46ZengWileyEvolutionary Applications1752-45712024-12-011712n/an/a10.1111/eva.70048Evolutionary Genomics Provides Insights Into Endangerment and Conservation of a Wild Apple Tree Species, Malus sieversiiJian Zhang0Fang‐Yuan Zhao1Hong‐Xiang Zhang2State Key Laboratory of Desert and Oasis Ecology, Key Laboratory of Ecological Safety and Sustainable Development in Arid Lands, Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography Chinese Academy of Sciences Urumqi ChinaState Key Laboratory of Desert and Oasis Ecology, Key Laboratory of Ecological Safety and Sustainable Development in Arid Lands, Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography Chinese Academy of Sciences Urumqi ChinaState Key Laboratory of Desert and Oasis Ecology, Key Laboratory of Ecological Safety and Sustainable Development in Arid Lands, Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography Chinese Academy of Sciences Urumqi ChinaABSTRACT Understanding the evolutionary history of a species is essential for effective conservation management. Malus sieversii, a relict broad‐leaf forest tree found in arid Central Asian mountains, has a narrow and fragmented distribution and is classified as an endangered species in China. This species is considered one of the ancestors of the domesticated apple trees. In the present study, we sampled five populations of M. sieversii and its wide‐ranging congener M. baccata from China. Through deep whole‐genome resequencing, we analyzed the population's genetic diversity, genetic structure, demographic history, fixation of deleterious mutations, and genomic divergence. Our results revealed that M. baccata exhibits a higher level of genetic diversity than M. sieversii. The effective population size of M. sieversii decreased, whereas that of M. baccata recovered after the bottleneck effect. In M. sieversii, the genetic structure of the Yili region was distinct from that of the Tacheng region. Populations at the rear edge of the Tacheng region showed a stronger fixation of deleterious mutations than those in the Yili region. Genomic divergence indicated that the positively selected genes were associated with physiological processes within the genomic islands between the Yili and Tacheng regions. Based on these findings, we recommend the establishment of two separate conservation units for the Yili and Tacheng lineages to preserve their genetic resources. Given the limited distribution range and high fixation rate of deleterious mutations, urgent protective measures are recommended for the Tacheng lineage.https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.70048conservation managementsdeleterious mutationseffective population sizeevolutionary genomicsMalus sieversii
spellingShingle Jian Zhang
Fang‐Yuan Zhao
Hong‐Xiang Zhang
Evolutionary Genomics Provides Insights Into Endangerment and Conservation of a Wild Apple Tree Species, Malus sieversii
Evolutionary Applications
conservation managements
deleterious mutations
effective population size
evolutionary genomics
Malus sieversii
title Evolutionary Genomics Provides Insights Into Endangerment and Conservation of a Wild Apple Tree Species, Malus sieversii
title_full Evolutionary Genomics Provides Insights Into Endangerment and Conservation of a Wild Apple Tree Species, Malus sieversii
title_fullStr Evolutionary Genomics Provides Insights Into Endangerment and Conservation of a Wild Apple Tree Species, Malus sieversii
title_full_unstemmed Evolutionary Genomics Provides Insights Into Endangerment and Conservation of a Wild Apple Tree Species, Malus sieversii
title_short Evolutionary Genomics Provides Insights Into Endangerment and Conservation of a Wild Apple Tree Species, Malus sieversii
title_sort evolutionary genomics provides insights into endangerment and conservation of a wild apple tree species malus sieversii
topic conservation managements
deleterious mutations
effective population size
evolutionary genomics
Malus sieversii
url https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.70048
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