Long-Term Experiment Unveils Barley’s Adaptive Evolution
Researchers at the University of California-Riverside have uncovered how barley, a major agricultural crop, has adapted to changing environments and selective pressures over nearly a century. This research, detailed in a study published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science, emphasizes the importance of long-term studies in understanding adaptive evolution.
Barley, domesticated over 10,000 years ago, quickly became a staple for humans and livestock across Europe, Asia, and Northern Africa. This rapid expansion subjected barley to strong selective pressures, including artificial selection for desired traits and natural selection for diverse environments.
The Barley Composite Cross II Experiment
The Barley Composite Cross II (CCII) experiment, one of the world’s oldest evolutionary studies, began in 1929 in Davis, California. This multigenerational common garden experiment aimed to adapt a genetically diverse population of 28 barley varieties to local environmental conditions. Despite starting with thousands of genotypes, natural selection drastically reduced this diversity over time, leading to the dominance of a single clonal lineage by the 50th generation.
Researchers, led by Jacob Landis, found that the successful lineage was primarily composed of alleles from Mediterranean-like environments, similar to that of Davis. This indicated that local climate played a significant role in the adaptive process, particularly affecting genes related to reproductive timing.
Findings and Implications
The study revealed that local adaptation dominated barley’s evolution in the experiment. Although there were early, rapid gains in yield, the evolutionary breeding approach did not keep pace with the yield gains from pedigree-based breeding methods. This raises questions about why the most competitive genotypes produced during local adaptation are not necessarily the highest yielding.
“We found considerable evidence that local adaptation dominates evolution in this experiment,” Landis wrote. “However, understanding why the most competitive genotypes produced during local adaptation are not necessarily the highest yielding will be of great interest in the future.”
The CCII experiment provides invaluable insights into barley’s adaptive evolution under long-term environmental pressures. This research underscores the significance of maintaining long-term experiments to observe evolutionary dynamics directly and improve future agricultural practices.
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