Journal
ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 8, Issue 13, Pages 6492-6504Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.4106
Keywords
climatic niches; conservation programs; geographical information systems; Phaseolus spp; plant genetic resources
Categories
Funding
- CONACYT-Ciencia Basica [181756]
- IPN [1636]
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Despite its economic, social, biological, and cultural importance, wild forms of the genus Phaseolus are not well represented in germplasm banks, and they are at great risk due to changes in land use as well as climate change. To improve our understanding of the potential geographical distribution of wild beans (Phaseolus spp.) from Mexico and support in situ and ex situ conservation programs, we determined the climatic adaptation ranges of 29 species and two subspecies of Phaseolus collected throughout Mexico. Based on five biotic and 117 abiotic variables obtained from different databasesWorldClim, Global-Aridity, and Global-PETwe performed principal component and cluster analyses. Germplasm was distributed among 12 climatic types from a possible 28. The general climatic ranges were as follows: 8-3,083m above sea level; 12.07-26.96 degrees C annual mean temperature; 10.33-202.68mm annual precipitation; 9.33-16.56W/m(2) of net radiation; 11.68-14.23hr photoperiod; 0.06-1.57 aridity index; and 10-1,728mm/month of annual potential evapotranspiration. Most descriptive variables (25) clustered species into two groups: One included germplasm from semihot climates, and the other included germplasm from temperate climates. Species clustering showed 45% to 54% coincidence with species previously grouped using molecular data. The species P.filiformis, P.purpusii, and P.maculatus were found at low-humidity locations; these species could be used to improve our understanding of the extreme aridity adaptation mechanisms used by wild beans to avoid or tolerate climate change as well as to introgress favorable alleles into new cultivars adapted to hot, dry environments.
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