Top Banner
Diversity in European Chestnut (Castanea sativa Mill.) Emily Buck
26

Emily Buck

Apr 18, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Emily Buck

Diversity in European Chestnut (Castanea sativa Mill.)

Emily Buck

Page 2: Emily Buck

Talk Overview

• Introduce European Chestnut – Biology

– History

– Economic Value

– Concerns for the Species Future

• Conclusions and Discussion

• Preliminary Results

• CASCADE - EU project

• CASCADE at East Malling

Page 3: Emily Buck

Biology - Castanea sativa Mill.

• Classification – Family: Fagacea

– Genus: Castanea– 13 Castanea species– C. sativa, indigenous to Europe

• Age and height

– 30-35m, 150+ years old

– ‘Tree of 100 Horses’ - 2000-4000 yrs

• Monoecious

• Wind (insects) pollinated

Page 4: Emily Buck

History

Centre of

origin

Spread of C. sativa pre - glaciation

Page 5: Emily Buck

Spread of C. sativa post - glaciation

History

Page 6: Emily Buck

Economic Value

• Castanea sp: Nuts

– World production: 510,702 t/yr

– Asian 64%, Europe 30%

– C.sativa & hybrids Turkey: 70,000 t/yr

• Castanea sativa: Wood

– Mainland Europe:

structural and agricultural

– UK: agricultural use; fences

– 18, 788 ha in UK; 42% coppice

– Coppice: stems cut 3-25 year rotation

Page 7: Emily Buck

Concerns for the Species Future

• Climate change

– water and temperature

– seasonal variation

– disease spread Phytophthora (ink disease)Cryphonectria (chestnut blight)

– selection– management practice

Global Average Temperature

ºC

14.4

13.51860 2000

Year

• Human intervention

• Implication of habitat loss

Page 8: Emily Buck

Dr Romane, CNRS-CEFEDr Robin, INRA

Dr Villani (co-ordinator), CNR-IASDr Vannini, University of TusciaDr Botta, University of Torino

Miss Russell, HRI East MallingDr Garrod, University of Newcastle

Dr Eriksson, University of Agricultural Science

Dr Fernandez-Lopez, CIFL-Lourizan

Dr Aravanoupoulos, Aristotele University of Thessaloniki

Dr Diamandis, NAGREF

CASCADE - Partners

Page 9: Emily Buck

Securing Gene Conservation, Adaptive, Breeding Potential and Utilization of a Model Multipurpose tree species (Castanea sativa Mill.) in a Dynamic Environment

CASCADE

• 5th EU Framework Programme• Work programme 2: Energy, Environment and Sustainable

Development.• Key Action: Global Change, Climate and Biodiversity. • Thematic Priority: Assessing and Preserving Biodiversity.

http://soi.cnr.it/~chestnut/

Page 10: Emily Buck

1 Distribution, ecology and management– plant surveys, site history questionnaire

2 Gene dispersal and genetic make-up– application of molecular markers– East Malling involved

3 Variation in adaptive traits – QTL mapping – drought, frost resistance– field performance – East Malling involved

Main areas of research

CASCADE

Page 11: Emily Buck

5 Socio-economic & environmental impact– questionnaires growers and consumers

6 Strategy for integrated conservation and utilisation– integration research areas 1-5

Main areas of research

CASCADE

4 Variation in disease resistance– incidence of Phytophthora sp.– resistance; inoculate seedlings, shoots

Page 12: Emily Buck

CASCADE

Populations: Natural stand Coppice Orchard

Extreme sites

Other sites

Page 13: Emily Buck

CASCADE - 3 Population Types

Natural stand

Coppice Orchard

Page 14: Emily Buck

Fluorescent primers ABI 3100 prism

Simple Sequence Repeats (SSRs) - Microsatellites

33P labelled primers autoradiography

………..AGAGAGAGAGAGAG………..

• Italy and East Malling - SSR Enriched libraries C. sativa

Page 15: Emily Buck

Primer Repeatmotif

Number ofputative alleles

EMCs2 [CGG]7 3

EMCs4 [GGC]7 3

EMCs10 [CA]8 3

EMCs11 [GGA]7[GGC]6 2

EMCs13 [GCA]8 3

EMCs14 [GAG]7 1

EMCs15 [CAC]9 5

EMCs17 [AGC]4[CCAA]5 4

EMCs22 [GA]19 6

EMCs25 [GA]12 5

EMCs32 [AG]18 8

EMCs38 [AG]31 12

EMCs42 [CA]11 3

Results - SSR primer Development 13 East Malling Castanea sativa (EMCs) SSR primers

Page 16: Emily Buck

1 32 54 6 87 109 1211

Results - CASCADE SSR Mapping

• 12 linkage groups (chromosomes), 829 cM

• 458 markers: RAPDs, ISSR, Isoenzymes, AFLP, STS, SSRs

UK Italian

Page 17: Emily Buck

1 32 54 6 87 109 1211

Results - SSRs for Diversity Screen

• Screening diversity: 8 mapped SSRs, 3 not mapped SSRs

Not mappedUK Italian

Page 18: Emily Buck

• Application of polymorphic SSRs

– Total of 11: 6 East Malling, UK

5 University of Torino, Italy

• Screen CASCADE environmentally extreme sites

– Natural, coppice and orchard populations

– 8 trees and 20 seeds from each population

– Total of 3,864 samples

CASCADE - Diversity Screen

Page 19: Emily Buck

Results - East Malling Diversity Screen

Number of AllelesPrimer

LinkageGroup Initially (20) At present

EMCs4 7 3 5EMCs15 9 5 6EMCs25 - 5 12EMCs38 4 12 25CsCAT4 - 6 11

CsCAT6 1 8 22

• 6 polymorphic SSR loci

• Total of 81 alleles found so far

Page 20: Emily Buck

Results

Preliminary relationships between individuals:

– Natural populations

– UK populations

Spain

Greece

FranceUK

Italy

Page 21: Emily Buck

Central Greece

Results Natural populations & UK

Northern Greece

• Greece populations discrete groups

• Individuals from Central and Northern Greece in separate groups

Spain

Greece

FranceUK

Italy

Page 22: Emily Buck

Southern Italy

Results Spain

Greece

FranceUK

Italy

• Southern Italy group, from Sicily

• UK and French generally dispersed throughout

Spain • Northern and Southern Spain Group

Natural populations & UK

Page 23: Emily Buck

Conclusions and Discussion

• Two distinct groups from Northern and Central Greece

– diversity within Greek populations low

– variation in adaptability experiments:

Greek samples low adaptability

– unique group?, susceptible to climate change?

• Distinct group from Southern Italy, dispersed individuals from Northern Italy

– diversity within Southern Italy population low

– diversity within Northern Italy population higher similarities samples in Spain, France and UK

– Romans spread from this region?

Natural

Page 24: Emily Buck

Conclusions and Discussion

• Group of Spanish individuals

– diversity within Spain populations low?

– some samples dispersed, spread from refugia?

• French samples dispersed

– natural spread / introduced from diverse Italian site, or

Spanish refugia

Natural

Page 25: Emily Buck

Conclusions and Discussion

• Diversity within Orchards and Coppice populations varies– region dependant – may be result of different selection pressure and

history of given population?

Orchard and Coppice

Additional data from other markers

• Diversity in UK populations– unusual diverse for marginal population – multiple imports from different areas at different times?

But very susceptible to Phytophthora (Ink disease)

Page 26: Emily Buck

Acknowledgements

CASCADEProject co-ordinator: Fiorella VillaniItaly: R. Botta, D. Marioni, M. CasasoliGreece: P. Aravanoupoulos, S. DiamandisSpain: J. Fernandez-LopezFrance: F. Romane, C. Robin, A. Grossmann,

T. Barreneche

http://soi.cnr.it/~chestnut/

PhD advisor: Karen RussellPhD supervisors: David Blakesley

Christine CahalanDave Moodley, Suad AlMarrooei, Bruce Sutherland,

Dan Sargent, Bobbie Maxted, everyone in the lab