Abstract
Typical linkage and quantitative trait locus (QTL) analyses in forest trees have been conducted in single pedigrees with sex-averaged linkage maps. The results of a QTL analysis for wood quality and growth traits of coastal Douglas-fir using eight full-sib families, each consisting of 40 progeny, replicated on four sites are presented. The resulting map of segregating genetic markers consisted of 120 amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) loci distributed across 19 linkage groups. The wood quality traits represent the widest suite of traits yet examined for QTL analysis in a tree species in a single study. Wood fiber traits showed the lowest number of QTLs (3) with relatively small effect (ca. 4%); wood density traits also showed just three QTLs but with slightly larger effect; wood chemistry traits showed more QTLs (7), while ring density traits showed many QTLs with large numbers of QTLs (78) and interesting patterns of temporal variation. Growth traits gave just five QTLs but of major effect (10–16%). Trees, with their long generation times, provide a rich resource for studies of temporal variation of QTL expression.
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