Abstract
Quantifying foliar stable carbon isotope discrim- ination (Δ) is a powerful approach for understanding genetic variation in gas exchange traits in large populations. The genetic architecture of Δ and third-year height is described for more than 1,000 clones of Pinus taeda tested on two contrasting sites. b 2 for Δ was 0.14 (±0.03), 0.20 (±0.07), and 0.09 (±0.04) at Florida, Georgia, and across sites, respectively. b H 2 for stable carbon isotope discrimina- tion ranged from 0.25 (±0.03) at the Florida site to 0.33 (±0.03) at the Georgia site, while the across-site estimate of b H 2 was 0.19 (±0.02). For third-year height, b 2 ranged from 0.13 (±0.05) at the Georgia site to 0.20 (±0.06) at the Florida site with an across-site estimate of 0.09 (±0.05). Broad-sense heritability estimates for third-year height were 0.23 (±0.03), 0.28 (±0.03), and 0.13 (±0.02) at the Florida site, Georgia site, and across sites, respectively. Type B total genetic correlation for Δ was 0.70±0.06, indicating that clonal rankings were relatively stable across sites, while for third-year height, rankings of clones were more unstable across the two trials brBTG ¼ 0:55 � 0:08 ðÞ . Third- year height and Δ were negatively correlated at the parental brADD ¼� 0:42 � 0:33 ðÞ , full-sib family brFS ¼� 0:54� ð 0:25Þ, and clonal brTG ¼� 0:30 � 0:11 ðÞ levels,suggesting that genetic variation for Δ in P. taeda may be a result of differences in photosynthetic capacity. We conclude that Δ may be a useful selection trait to improve water-use efficiency and for guiding deployment decisions in P. taeda.
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