Phylogenomics of the coconut (Cocos nucifera L.)
Date
2016
Authors
Gunn, Bee Fong
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
The coconut palm (Cocos nucifera L.) is a monotypic
member of the Cocoseae tribe (subtribe Attaleinae) and its
evolutionary history is profoundly intertwined with that of human
civilization. It is well adapted to drift-dispersal by oceanic
currents, colonizing coastal ecosystems and islands. Both today
and in the past, humans have exploited it as a potable source of
water, nutritious food, fibre and shelter during their
prehistoric voyages of civilization across the Pacific and
Indo-Atlantic Oceans. This long-term human interaction and
dissemination has altered its phenotype and the lack of a
universal domestication trait has obscured the putative wild
phenotype and its original geographical location. The main
objectives of this phylogenomic study of the coconut are: 1) to
determine the centre of coconut domestication, 2) elucidate the
geographical origin of the coconut, 3) identify hotspots of
genetic diversity, 4) understand migration and gene flow patterns
and 5) the impacts of domestication on coconut genome size.
Bayesian analysis of population genetic structure was applied to
multi-locus microsatellites generated from 1,322 coconut
accessions from across the species range. Results strongly
suggest that coconuts are differentiated into two genetic
populations corresponding to the Indo-Atlantic and Pacific
oceanic basins. This pattern suggests independent regions of
domestication in these two regions and proposed two centres:
island Southeast Asia and the southern margins of the Indian
subcontinent. I uncovered evidence for admixtures between these
populations consistent with Austronesian trade routes from
Southeast Asia to Madagascar and Arab trading along east African
coast. To address the overarching objective of the geographical
origin of the coconut, I integrated the sub-disciplines of
phylogeography, phylogenetics and population genetics to evaluate
four criteria: i) ancestral haplotype location, ii) phylogeny and
divergence times, iii) coalescence and ancestral reconstruction
and iv) genetic diversity. I applied high throughput sequencing
technology from chloroplast (14 loci) and nuclear (4 loci)
genomes from 118 coconuts across 19 subpopulations representing
the species’ distribution. Evaluation of criteria using
genomic-scale sequence data, taken together with fossil evidence,
suggest that the ancestral geographical origin of the extant
coconut is likely in Australasia encompassing Australia,
Indonesian Archipelago and Papua New Guinea. The Indo-Atlantic is
a hotspot for genetic diversity and a sink population. Migration
patterns and gene flow directions were inferred by testing
hypotheses of migration models based on geographical and genetic
a priori implementing Bayesian coalescent framework and Log Bayes
Factors (LBF). For first set of models, LBF indicated that the
coconut is not panmictic. The network model showed migration
trend from out of Southeast Asia into Oceania consistent with
Austronesian migrations. For the second set, bi-directional gene
flow model between the Indo-Atlantic and Pacific showed best
support. The impact of domestication on genome size and ploidy
levels was investigated by flow cytometry technique.
Quantifications of genome size of 23 cultivars including Talls,
Dwarfs, hybrids and wild-sown coconuts indicate variation. My
findings demonstrated that highly domesticated Dwarf types
expressed significantly less genome size variation than the Tall
types. Ancestral reconstruction of genome sizes amongst
Attaleinae show that polyploidy evolved independently at least
four times.
Description
Keywords
dispersal, domestication, genome size, migration, networks, phylogenomics, phylogeography, population genetics
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Thesis (PhD)
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description