Current Applications of Genetics to Forestry
A special issue of Forests (ISSN 1999-4907). This special issue belongs to the section "Genetics and Molecular Biology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (10 November 2021) | Viewed by 13384
Special Issue Editors
Interests: hybridization; adaptation; abiotic stress; Pinus; Quercus
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Genetics is a rapidly progressing area of biological sciences with increasing economic and ecologic relevance in Forestry and Conservation during the last years. Traditional selection procedures have driven the collection and production of forest reproductive materials, aimed to increased wood and pulp production, for more than a century, obtaining significant improvements, especially when combined with clonal silviculture. However, forestry faces new challenges as traditional breeding economic gains must confront resilience trade-offs and genetic diversity is frequently depauperated or unknown. In addition, conservation activities related to eco-environmental services, habitat protection, conservation, and management of biodiversity (including wildlife and forest plant genetic resources), face important risks due to climate change.
Knowledge of inter- and intraspecific genetic diversity, gene flow, and migrations, as well as genetic breeding focused on production and resistance to abiotic threats, diseases, plagues, and pests, facing global change, will play an increasingly key role in forestry activities and policies in the future. For example, genetic criteria are becoming increasingly important in the identification and certification of forest reproductive materials.
This Special Issue of Forests is aimed an overview of the currently ongoing applications of genetics to forestry, including diversity studies, common garden experiments, advances in the comprehension of the life-term plastic response and genetic/epigenetic adaptations of usually long-living forest tree species, as well and genetic breeding, especially those taking advantage of the most recent techniques (massive sequencing, bioinformatics, new phenotyping and analysis techniques, clonal propagation of elite genotypes, etc.), as well as future prospects in these areas.
Dr. Álvaro Soto
Dr. Pablo G. Goicoechea
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Population genetics and genomics
- Breeding
- Bioinformatics
- Genetic/epigenetic/adaptations
- Massive genotyping/phenotyping
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