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Higher Levels of Multiple Paternities Increase Seedling Survival in the Long-Lived Tree Eucalyptus gracilis

<p> The dataset aims at studying associations between mating system parameters and fitness in natural populations of trees. Fifty-eight open-pollinated progeny arrays were collected from trees in three populations. Progeny were planted in a reciprocal transplant trial. Fitness was measured by family establishment rates. We genotyped all trees and their progeny at eight microsatellite loci. Planting site had a strong effect on fitness, but seed provenance and seed provenance × planting site did not. Populations had comparable mating system parameters and were generally outcrossed, experienced low biparental inbreeding and high levels of multiple paternity. As predicted, seed families that had more multiple paternities also had higher fitness, and no fitness-inbreeding correlations were detected. Demonstrating that fitness was most affected by multiple paternities rather than inbreeding, we provide evidence supporting the constrained inbreeding hypothesis; i.e. that multiple paternity may impact on fitness over and above that of inbreeding, particularly for preferentially outcrossing trees at life stages beyond seed development. This dataset could potentially be reused for meta-analysis or review of effects of habitat fragmentation on plants (e.g. pollination, mating system, genetic diversity etc). Please contact owner prior to re-use. </p>

<p>This is part of the authors' PhD at the University of Adelaide, supervised by Prof Andrew Lowe, Dr Mike Gardner and Dr Kym Ottewell. Main goals of the project were 1. Examine and quantify the impact of fragmentation and tree density on mating patterns, and how this may vary with pollinators of differing mobility 2. Determine the theoretical expectations and perform empirical tests of mating pattern-fitness relationships in trees 3. Explore the plant genetic resource management implications that arise from the observations in aims 1 and 2 </p>

Simple

Identification info

Date (Creation)
2009-09-17
Date (Publication)
2015-01-29
Date (Revision)
2014-07-14
Edition
1

Identifier

Title
DataCite
Code
doi:10.4227/05/5510BCC346AE2
Codespace
http://dx.doi.org

Publisher

Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network
Building 1019, 80 Meiers Rd
Indooroopilly
QLD
4068
Australia
+61 7 3365 9097

Author

Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Adelaide - Breed, Martin (Senior Lecturer in Biology)
Molecular Life Sciences Building, The University of Adelaide - North Terrace Campus, Adelaide, SA, 5005, Australia
Adelaide
SA
5005
Australia
Website
https://www.tern.org.au/

Purpose
Studying associations between mating system parameters and fitness in natural populations of trees advances our understanding of how local environments affect seed quality, and thereby helps to predict when inbreeding or multiple paternities should impact on fitness. Indeed, for species that demonstrate inbreeding avoidance, multiple paternities (i.e. the number of male parents per half-sib family) should still vary and regulate fitness more than inbreeding named here as the constrained inbreeding hypothesis. We test this hypothesis in <i>Eucalyptus gracilis</i>, a predominantly insect-pollinated tree.
Credit
We at TERN acknowledge the Traditional Owners and Custodians throughout Australia, New Zealand and all nations. We honour their profound connections to land, water, biodiversity and culture and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and emerging.
Status
Completed

Point of contact

Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Adelaide - Breed, Martin (Senior Lecturer in Biology)
Molecular Life Sciences Building, The University of Adelaide - North Terrace Campus, Adelaide, SA, 5005, Australia
Molecular Life Sciences Building, The University of Adelaide - North Terrace Campus
Adelaide
SA
5005
Australia
Topic category
  • Biota

Extent

Description
IBRA region: Murray-Darling Basin; Murray-Darling Depression.
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S
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Temporal extent

Time period
2009-09-17 2015-01-01
Title
Higher Levels of Multiple Paternities Increase Seedling Survival in the Long-Lived Tree Eucalyptus gracilis
Website
Higher Levels of Multiple Paternities Increase Seedling Survival in the Long-Lived Tree Eucalyptus gracilis

Related documentation

Maintenance and update frequency
Not planned
GCMD Science Keywords
  • ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONS
  • PLANT BREEDING AND GENETICS
  • EVOLUTIONARY ADAPTATION
  • SPECIES/POPULATION INTERACTIONS
ANZSRC Fields of Research
  • Evolutionary ecology
  • Genetics
  • Population ecology
  • Forestry management and environment
  • Molecular evolution
TERN Parameter Vocabulary
  • heterozygosity
  • Unitless
  • vegetative height
  • Centimetre
  • dead plant
  • Percent
GCMD Horizontal Resolution Ranges
  • 100 meters - < 250 meters
GCMD Temporal Resolution Ranges
  • irregular
Australian Plant Name Index
  • Eucalyptus gracilis F.Muell.
Keywords (Discipline)
  • Ecosystem Assessment And Management (9605)
  • Flora, Fauna And Biodiversity (9608)
  • Land And Water Management (9609)

Resource constraints

Use limitation
The Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license allows others to copy, distribute, display, and create derivative works provided that they credit the original source and any other nominated parties. Details are provided at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
File name
88x31.png
File description
CCBy Logo from creativecommons.org
File type
png
Linkage
https://w3id.org/tern/static/cc-by/88x31.png

Title
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence
Alternate title
CC-BY
Edition
4.0
Website
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Access constraints
License
Use constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints
TERN services are provided on an "as-is" and "as available" basis. Users use any TERN services at their discretion and risk. They will be solely responsible for any damage or loss whatsoever that results from such use including use of any data obtained through TERN and any analysis performed using the TERN infrastructure. <br />Web links to and from external, third party websites should not be construed as implying any relationships with and/or endorsement of the external site or its content by TERN. <br /><br />Please advise any work or publications that use this data via the online form at https://www.tern.org.au/research-publications/#reporting
Other constraints
Please cite this dataset as {Author} ({PublicationYear}). {Title}. {Version, as appropriate}. Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network. Dataset. {Identifier}.
Other constraints
(C)2015 University of Adelaide. Rights owned by University of Adelaide.

Resource constraints

Classification
Unclassified

Distribution Information

Distributor

Distributor

Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network
Building 1019, 80 Meiers Rd
Indooroopilly
QLD
4068
Australia
+61 7 3365 9097
OnLine resource
Breed_et_al_PLoSONE

Distribution Information

Distributor

Distributor

Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network
Building 1019, 80 Meiers Rd
Indooroopilly
QLD
4068
Australia
+61 7 3365 9097
OnLine resource
Breed_Family_csv

Distribution Information

Distributor

Distributor

Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network
Building 1019, 80 Meiers Rd
Indooroopilly
QLD
4068
Australia
+61 7 3365 9097
OnLine resource
Breed_indiviodual_data

Distribution Information

Distributor

Distributor

Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network
Building 1019, 80 Meiers Rd
Indooroopilly
QLD
4068
Australia
+61 7 3365 9097
OnLine resource
file

Data quality info

Hierarchy level
Dataset
Abstract
PlaceHolder Text = Name of the report

Resource lineage

Statement
Reciprocal transplant experiment and microsatellite genotyping of open-pollinated progeny arrays : Fifty-eight open-pollinated progeny arrays were collected from trees in three populations. Progeny were planted in a reciprocal transplant trial. Fitness was measured by family establishment rates. We genotyped all trees and their progeny at eight microsatellite loci.
Hierarchy level
Dataset

Reference System Information

Reference system identifier
EPSG/EPSG:3577

Reference system type
Geodetic Geographic 2D

Metadata

Metadata identifier
urn:uuid/dcace60b-0d07-4268-9baa-be652370503d

Language
English
Character encoding
UTF8

Point of contact

Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network
Building 1019, 80 Meiers Rd
Indooroopilly
QLD
4068
Australia
+61 7 3365 9097
Title
Mating system and early viability resistance to habitat fragmentation in a bird-pollinated eucalypt

Identifier

Code
b7419cef-2920-498e-a91a-b300010d4897
Codespace
https://geonetwork.tern.org.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/
Description
Parent Metadata Record

Type of resource

Resource scope
Dataset
Metadata linkage
https://geonetwork.tern.org.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/dcace60b-0d07-4268-9baa-be652370503d

Point-of-truth metadata URL

Date info (Creation)
2022-09-26T00:00:00
Date info (Revision)
2023-01-24T02:42:53

Metadata standard

Title
ISO 19115-1:2014/AMD 1:2018 Geographic information - Metadata - Fundamentals
Edition
1

Metadata standard

Title
ISO/TS 19115-3:2016
Edition
1.0

Metadata standard

Title
ISO/TS 19157-2:2016
Edition
1.0
Title
Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (TERN) Metadata Profile of ISO 19115-3:2016 and ISO 19157-2:2016
Date (published)
2021
Edition
1.0

Identifier

Code
10.5281/zenodo.5652221
Website
https://github.com/ternaustralia/TERN-ISO19115/releases/tag/v1.0

 
 

Overviews

Spatial extent

N
S
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W


Keywords

ANZSRC Fields of Research
Evolutionary ecology Forestry management and environment Genetics Molecular evolution Population ecology
GCMD Science Keywords
ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONS EVOLUTIONARY ADAPTATION PLANT BREEDING AND GENETICS SPECIES/POPULATION INTERACTIONS

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