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Liu, Yang; Erbilgin, Nadir; Ratcliffe, Blaise; Klutsch, Jennifer G.; Wei, Xiaojing; Ullah, Aziz; Cappa, Eduardo Pablo; Chen, Charles; Thomas, Barb R.; El-Kassaby, Yousry A. 2022-10-09 <p>Whilst droughts, intensified by climate change, have been affecting forests worldwide, pest epidemics are a major source of uncertainty for assessing drought impacts on forest trees. Thus far, little information has documented the adaptability and evolvability of traits related to drought and pests simultaneously. We conducted common-garden experiments to investigate how several phenotypic traits (i.e., height growth, drought avoidance based on water-use efficiency inferred from δ<sup>13</sup>C, and pest resistance based on defense traits) interact in five mature lodgepole pine populations established in four progeny trials in western Canada. The relevance of interpopulation variation in climate sensitivity highlighted that seed-source warm populations had greater adaptive capability than cold populations. In test sites, warming generated taller trees with higher δ<sup>13</sup>C and increased the evolutionary potential of height growth and δ<sup>13</sup>C across populations. We found, however, no pronounced gradient in defenses and their evolutionary potential along populations or test sites. Response to selection was weak in defenses across test sites, but high for height growth, particularly at warm test sites. Response to selection of δ<sup>13</sup>C varied depending on its selective strength relative to height growth. We conclude that warming could promote the adaptability and evolvability of growth response and drought avoidance with limited evolutionary influence from pest (biotic) pressures.</p>
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Liu, Yang; Erbilgin, Nadir; Cappa, Eduardo Pablo; Chen, Charles; Ratcliffe, Blaise; Wei, Xiaojing; Klutsch, Jennifer G.; Ullah, Aziz; Azcona, Jaime Sebastian; Thomas, Barb R.; El-Kassaby, Yousry A. 2022-12-28 We selected five lodgepole pine populations, representing a total of 224 maternal half-sib families, grown in four progeny test sites (> 35 yrs) located along various climatic gradients in central Alberta, Canada. Across the four progeny test sites, we chose a total of 1,490 trees for phenotyping. Height growth (m) was measured at age 35-yr with a clinometer. Carbon isotope ratio (δ13C, in ‰) analysis was performed at Alberta Innovates in Victoria, using outside slabs cut and ground from the 5 mm increment cores taken from the north side of each tree at approximately breast height (1.3 m) at age 35. Samples were analyzed using an established method on a MAT253 Mass Spectrometer with Conflo IV interface and a Fisons NA1500 EA. We assessed the severity of WGR infection in the test sites by a qualitative scoring system with discrete categories ranging from no gall symptoms to deceased (four tiers) for all trees sampled at age 36-yr. We also investigated these trees’ suitability to MPB. Host tree suitability to the beetles was evaluated by quantifying defense chemicals (mainly monoterpenes) using a Gas Chromatography/Flame Ionization Detector based on cambial tissues collected by a hole punch when trees were actively growing, coinciding with MPB flight in western Canada. Then, chemical profiling was performed to test against MPB performance based on laboratory bioassays. A cutoff of four categories was used to classify trees with different MPB suitability levels. In addition, we performed dendrochronological analysis to calculate drought resistance indices based on changes in tree-ring width before and after drought event.

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