Ecological, genetic and evolutionary drivers of regional genetic differentiation in Arabidopsis thaliana
Antonio R. Castilla,
Belén Méndez Vigo,
Arnald Marcer,
Joaquín Martínez-Minaya,
David Conesa,
F. Xavier Picó,
Carlos Alonso-Blanco
June, 2020
Abstract
Disentangling the drivers of genetic differentiation is one of the cornerstones in evolution. This is because genetic diversity, and the way in which it is partitioned within and among populations across space, is an important asset for the ability of populations to adapt and persist in changing environments. We tested three major hypotheses accounting for genetic differentiation—isolation-by-distance (IBD), isolation-by-environment (IBE) and isolation-by-resistance (IBR)—in the annual plant Arabidopsis thaliana across the Iberian Peninsula, the region with the largest genomic diversity. To that end, we sampled, genotyped with genome-wide SNPs, and analyzed 1772 individuals from 278 populations distributed across the Iberian Peninsula.
Publication
BMC Evolutionary Biology, 20 - 71
Associate Professor in Statistics and Optimization
My research interests include Spatio-temporal Bayesian models using INLA and Stan, and Compositional Data methods