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Forest Genetics Glossary
Introduction
This is a brief glossary that I use in my Forest Genetics classes. Most of
the definitions are fairly general and would apply to most organisms and
applications, but a few are forest-genetics specific. The glossary is very much
a work-in-progress. I have borrowed definitions from a number of sources, and
when I get done polishing it up, I will write a short acknowledgment.
Feel free to link to it, or if you would like a copy on disk, send me a
formatted disk (Mac only, I'm an elitist.)
If you have comments or suggestions, send me an e-mail:
mailto:cmaynard@mailbox.syr.edu
C.
Maynard 6/12/96
Glossary
A... B... C... D... E... F... G... H... I... J... K... L... M... N... O... P... Q... R... S... T... U... V... WXYZ
- Additive genes -
- A form of allelic interaction in which there is no dominance. The
heterozygote is intermediate in phenotype between homozygotes for the
alternative alleles. For multiple-gene traits, approximately equal
contributions made by many loci.
- Allele -
- One of several alternative forms of a gene occupying the same locus on a
particular chromosome.
- Analysis of variance -
- A statistical analysis by which F values (variance ratios) are composed in
such a manner as to determine the probability that differences among
populations or treatments are too large to be due to chance.
- Backcross -
- Crossing a hybrid back to one of the original parents, called the
recurrent parent. In agronomy, the recurrent parent is usually a single
genotype, often a named variety. In forestry, the recurrent parent is usually
a different genotype from the same species or population. (This is done to
prevent inbreeding depression.) Example: collecting pollen from a pitch pine x
loblolly pine F1 hybrid and pollinating a pure loblolly pine. The seed
produced would be called first backcross and the loblolly pine the recurrent
parent.
- Backward selection -
- Selection of parent trees based on results from a progeny test.
(See Forward
selection.)
- Best linear prediction (BLP) -
- A statistical method which utilities matrix algebra to predict breeding
values for any trait or selection index; in BLP fixed effects are assumed to
be known. BLP is especially suited for analyses of messy or unbalanced
data. (See unbalanced)
- Best linear unbiased prediction (BLUP) -
- A statistical method which predicts breeding values for any trait or
selection index; unlike BLP, in BLUP the fixed effects are estimated. Like
BLP, BLUP is well suited for analyses of messy or unbalanced data.
(See unbalanced)
- Biodiversity -
- (biological diversity) The variety and variability (both in numbers and
frequency) of the organisms and the genetic variability within each species.
The term can be used to describe a particular site, a general habitat type, a
small or large geographic region, or (less correctly), the genetic diversity
of a particular species or population. (See
gene
pool, breeding
population, heterozygosity,
and germplasm
conservation.)
- Block -
- In a field study arranged in a randomized complete-block design, a block
is a unit of land upon which at least one plot of all of the entries
(families, clones provenances) are planted. (In this case a replication and a
block are the same.)
- Breeding orchard -
- (breeding seed orchard, breeding arboretum) A planting of selected trees,
usually clonally propagated, designed to ease breeding work.
- Breeding population -
- A group of individuals selected from a wild population for use in a
breeding program. Usually phenotypically selected for desirable traits. In
species with large natural ranges, there are usually several to many,
more-or-less separate breeding populations, each designed to provide progeny
suited to a particular geographic region (See seed
zone and breeding
zone.)
- Breeding value -
- The genetic value of an individual determined by the mean value of its
progeny. May be on the basis of individual traits or a selection index.
- Breeding zone -
- An area within which a single population of improved trees can be planted
without fear of mis-adaptation. (See seed
zone.)
- Candidate tree -
- A tree that has been tentatively selected for inclusion in a breeding
program, but has not yet been measured or compared with surrounding trees.
(See plus
tree and elite
tree.)
- Character (trait) -
- A distinctive but not necessarily invariable feature exhibited by all
individuals of a group and capable of being described or measured; e.g. color,
size, performance. A character of a given individual will have a certain
phenotype as determined by the individual's genotype and environment.
- Chromosome number -
- The number of chromosomes found in a typical individual of a particular
species. Typically the sex cells of a species have one-half the number of
chromosomes found in the vegetative portion and are said to be haploid.
(See polyploid.)
- Cline -
- An environmental gradient (temperature, rainfall, soil ph . . .) and a
corresponding phenotypic gradient in a population of plants or animals. Where
these have been evaluated by provenance tests, clines are often found to have
a genetic basis.
- Clonal test -
- A field planting of several to many vegetatively propagated plants. Such
tests furnish estimates of the relative performance of different genotypes,
but do not necessarily provide information on breeding behavior.
- Clone -
-
- To propagate a plant asexually usually by grafting, rooting cuttings,
tissue culture, or apomictic seed. Except for an extremely low level of
mutation, all plants from a clone are genetically identical. (This is the
usage most common in agronomy, horticulture and forestry.) (See ortet
and ramet.)
- To regenerate a whole plant from a single cell.(This usage is common in
tissue culture research.)
- To identify and isolate a gene controlling a specific trait from an
organism. (This usage is common in molecular biology.)
- A group of plants produced from cuttings, stump or root sprouts, tissue
culture, or some other method that produces offspring genetically identical
to the original plant. Most commonly used in forestry to establish grafted
seed orchards, but becoming more common for commercial
plantations.
- Combining ability -
- The ability of an individual, when crossed, to produce progeny with strong
expression of a particular trait.
- Combining ability, general -
- Good general combining ability (GCA) is the ability of an individual to
produce progeny with high genetic quality, when crossed to many other
individuals in the population.
- Combining ability, specific -
- Good specific combining ability (SCA) is when the progeny from a
particular full-sib cross perform better than what would be predicted from the
general combining ability of either parent.
- Conelet -
- An immature cone (strobilus) in the conifers.
- Control pollination -
- To purposely pollinate the female flowers of a tree with pollen from a
known source, usually one specific tree. Usually the flowers are Protected
from undesirable pollen by covering them with a pollen-tight cloth or paper
bag before they are receptive and adding known-source pollen at receptivity.
Full-sib families are produced.
- Cross -
- (1) To collect pollen from one tree and pollinate a second tree.
(2)
The progeny of a control pollination.
- Cross-pollination -
- Pollination by genetically different plants
- Crossing groups -
- Any group of individuals which comprises a unique set of parents. A
diallel CG is one in which controlled crosses are made between each pair of
parents in the group but crosses with parents outside the group are excluded.
A factorial CG is one in which a limited number of parents are used as male
testers in controlled crosses with an unlimited number of female parents. An
open-pollinated CG is one in which all parents in a breeding population are
included in a progeny test or series of tests and which may be used for
reforestation with genetically improved material.
- Diallel, complete or full-
- A mating design and subsequent progeny test resulting from the crossing of
'n' parents in all possible 'n2' combinations including selfs and reciprocals.
(Because of severe inbreeding depression in the selfs, these are often skipped
and the test still called a "full" diallel.)
- Diallel, incomplete or partial
- A partial sampling - any individual family or type of family may be
omitted. In either the complete or incomplete diallel, identities of both seed
and pollen parents are maintained for each family.( See Pedigree)
- Dominance -
- In classical Mendelian genetics, the masking of the action of one allele
by another. If an individual with red flowers is crossed with an individual
with white flowers and all progeny have red flowers, then the allele for red
pigment is fully dominant over the allele for white flowers.
- Dominance, partial -
- The incomplete masking of the action of one allele by another. If an
individual with red flowers is crossed with an individual with white flowers
and all progeny have pink flowers, then the allele for red pigment is
partially dominant over the allele for white flowers.
- Dysgenic -
- An action or process that is detrimental to the genetic qualities of a
population. Usually applied to human actions, such as high grading or land
clearing, which would reduce the local gene pool.
- Ecotype -
- A sub-population of a species that occurs in a particular well-defined
environment, usually showing better adaptation to that environment than the
species as a whole. (See cline.)
- Elite tree -
- A tree that has been shown by progeny testing to produce superior
offspring (See plus
tree and candidate
tree.)
- Endemic -
- A plant or animal species or subspecies native to a small region.
- ex situ management -
- The management of planted stands of trees to protect them and insure
survival, growth and identity; the conservation or preservation of trees as
seed, pollen, tissue culture, or excised plant parts. (See germplasm
conservation, ex situ.)
- Exotic -
- Broad definition: A non-native population introduced into a new area.
Narrow definition: a species introduced from another country.
- F1 -
- The first (filial) generation of a cross. Usually the progeny from an F1
cross will be phenotypically fairly uniform.
- F2 -
- The second (filial) generation of a cross, produced by intercrossing
individuals from the F1 generation. The progeny of an F2 cross will be more
variable phenotypically than the F1.
- Family - A group of closely related genotypes. (See sib)
- Family selection -
- The selection of progeny families on their mean performance. In addition,
the best individuals are usually selected in the best families.
- Fertilization -
- Union of the nucleus and other cellular constituents of a male gamete
(sperm) with those of an egg to form a zygote. In some species, fertilization
may occur months after pollination.
- Fitness -
- In classical genetics, the ability of an individual or population to both
survive and reproduce in a particular environment.
- Fitness, adaptive -
- The ability of a population to survive, reproduce, and adapt genetically
to a changing environment for at least a modest number (usually fewer than 50)
generations. (See gene
pool and heterozygosity.)
- Fitness, evolutionary -
- The ability of a population (usually a whole species or ecotype) to
survive, reproduce, and adapt genetically to a changing environment for many
(usually more than 50) generations. (See gene
pool and heterozygosity.)
- Flower -
- Angiosperm reproductive structure bearing pistils, stamens, or both, and
usually also sepals and petals. So-called flowers of conifers are the male and
female strobili before and during pollination.
- Forest genetics -
- The study of heredity in forest trees.
- Forest tree improvement -
- The application of genetic principles to the improvement and management of
forest trees.
- Forward selection -
- Choosing the best individuals out of a progeny test for use in seed
orchards and/or subsequent generations of breeding. (See Backward
selection.)
- Gain -
- (See genetic
gain.)
- Gene bank -
- A collection of germplasm (seeds, pollen, whole plants, extracted DNA)
collected and maintained so as to sample as much as possible of the genetic
variability in a population. (See germplasm
conservation.)
- Gene flow -
- The movement of specific alleles among different populations of a species
or among related species.
- Gene pool -
- The sum total of all the genetic variation in the breeding population of a
species and closely related species capable of crossing with the species.
- Gene pool, primary -
- The sum total of all the genetic variation in the breeding population of a
species and closely related species that commonly interbreed with, or can be
routinely crossed with, the species.
- Gene pool, secondary -
- The sum total of all the genetic variation in the breeding populations of
related species that can be crossed with the species using mentor pollen,
embryo rescue or other unusual measures.
- Gene pool, tertiary -
- The sum total of all the genetic variation in other organisms that cannot
be crossed with the species. (With the development of genetic engineering, it
is theoretically possible to transfer genes isolated from any organism (plant,
animals, virus, or bacterium) into a plant. This makes the line between the
secondary and tertiary gene pools somewhat fuzzy.)
- Gene -
- The basic unit of inheritance.
- Genetic diversity -
- General concept: the amount of genotypic variability in a population.
(See gene
pool.) Quantitative definition: the number of different alleles per
loci and the proportion of loci with more than one allele in a species or
population.
- Genetic drift -
- Changes in gene frequency in small populations due to random chance.
Usually a loss of rare alleles.
- Genetic gain -
- The change achieved by artificial selection in a specific trait. Gain is
usually expressed as the change per generation or the change per year. Gain is
influenced by selection intensity, parental variation, and heritability.
- Genetics -
- Genetics is the basic science dealing with causes of resemblances and
differences among organisms related by descent. It takes into account the
effects of genes and the environment.
- Genotype -
- The specific set of genes possessed by an individual, both expressed and
recessive.
- Genotype-environment interaction -
- Changes in rank or levels of performance among individuals when tested in
different environments. (See progeny
tests and clonal
tests.)
- Geographic variation -
- The phenotypic differences among native trees growing in different
portions of a species' range. If the differences are largely genetic rather
than environmental, the variation is usually specified as racial, ecotypic, or
clinal.
- Germplasm conservation -
- Maintenance of the genetic variability of a population. (The term is used
in preference to oegermplasm preservation” to reflect the ever-changing nature
of living populations.)
- Germplasm conservation, ex situ -
- Maintaining the genetic variability of a population in a different
environment or geographic location than where it evolved, i.e., plantations of
exotic species, breeding orchards, cold storage of seed or pollen. (See
gene
bank.)
- Germplasm conservation, in situ -
- Maintaining the genetic variability of a population in approximately the
same geographic and ecological conditions under which it evolved. (This should
always be the first choice.)
- Heritability -
- General concept: The degree to which progeny resemble their parents.
Quantitative definition: A ratio of genetic relative to environmental factors
that influence the expression of a trait.
- Heritability, broad sense -
- The proportion of the total phenotypic variability for which genetic
differences are responsible.
- Heritability, narrow sense -
- The proportion of the total phenotypic variability that is due to additive
genetic variability.
- Heterozygous -
- Having two different alleles at a locus. When used to refer to the whole
genotype, indicates that the individual has different alleles at most loci.
When used to refer to a species as having low or high heterozygosity relative
to other species, indicates that the species has a relatively high number of
variable loci.
- Homozygous -
- Having two identical alleles at a locus, at most loci, or in the entire
species. (See heterozygous.)
- Hybrid -
- Progeny from a cross among dissimilar genotypes. In forestry, the term is
usually used for crosses between species.
- Ideotype -
- The ideal type or perfect specimen. A description or illustration of what
the final goal of genetic improvement for a species would look like. The
ideotype is developed without regard to heritabilities for the individual
traits involved. It is not intended to be a practical field guide for
selecting "+" trees, but as a starting point for developing a field-selection
guide.
- Inbreeding depression -
- The reduction in vigor often observed in progeny from matings between
close relatives. Inbreeding depression is due to the expression of recessive
deleterious alleles and is usually severe in open-pollinated outcrossing
species (most forest trees) that occur in fairly high population densities.
- Inbreeding -
- Matings between related individuals. In open pollinated tree species,
inbreeding usually leads to mild to poor seed set, low germination, and severe
growth reduction.
(See selfing.)
- Introgression -
- The movement of genes from one population into another through
hybridization followed by backcrossing. Usually refers to movement of genes
from one species to another or among sub-species that have been geographically
isolated then brought back together by changes in the species ranges or
planting of exotic populations. (See gene
flow.)
- Land race -
- A population of trees of a non-native species that has undergone one or
more generations of natural selection in a new environment, i.e., Norway
spruce in New York State.
- Locus -
- The position of a gene on a chromosome.
- Mutation -
- A sudden change in the genotype, usually caused by a small change in the
DNA sequences in the chromosomes. It may also be caused by changes in
chromosome number or breakage of individual chromosomes.
- Neighborhood -
- The largest population in which mating occurs at random. Generally, a
small population within which individuals can be expected to be closely
related. Neighborhoods may be created by barriers to pollen and seed movement,
or other isolating factors.
- Open pollinated-
- Pollination occurring due to wind or insects. (See sib.)
- Ortet-
- The original plant from which a clone is started through rooted cuttings,
grafting, or tissue culture, or other means of vegetative propagation. The
original plus tree used to start a grafted clone for inclusion in a seed
orchard is the ortet. (See ramet
and clone.)
- Outcrossing-
- Matings (controlled or natural) among unrelated individuals. May also
refer to a species that has specific barriers to selfing, or exhibits such
inbreeding depression that inbred individuals never reach maturity.
(See selfing.)
- Pedigree - Record of ancestry.
- Pedigree, full-
- All parents, grandparents . . . of a particular genotype are known all the
way back to some natural population.
- Pedigree, partial-
- Some, but not all, ancestors of a particular genotype are known, usually
the female parents. Partial pedigrees are most common where open-pollinated or
polycross seed is used for progeny tests.
- Pedigree breeding-
- A breeding system where all the ancestors of any individual in the
population are known back to the original "+" trees selected in wild stands.
The system depends on control pollination for all matings.
- Phenotype-
- The visible characteristics of a tree. The phenotype is determined by the
genotype interacting with the environment in which it is grown.
- Plot-
- In a field study, a group of trees, all from the same entry (family,
clone, provenance . . .) planted together (usually). (See block
and randomized-block
design.)
- Plot, contiguous-
- In a field study, a group of trees, all from the same entry (family,
clone, provenance . . .) planted together. A five-tree row-plot is probably
the most common design for forest genetics experiments. (See block
and randomized-block
design.)
- Plot, non-contiguous-
- In a field study, a group of trees, all from the same entry (family,
clone, provenance . . .) planted in the same block, but not planted
together. The non-contiguous interlocked-plot design is a recent innovation
that allows tests to be thinned systematically and still maintaining uniform
spacing. (See block and randomized-block
design.)
- Plus tree-
- A phenotypically superior but untested tree. (See elite
tree and candidate
tree.)
- Pollination -
- Deposition of pollen on the receptive part of the female flower.
- Polycross test-
- A progeny test to assess general combining ability from crosses among
selected parents. Identities can be maintained only for the seed parents. A
mixture of pollen is artificially applied to each female parent, or the
selections naturally and randomly open-pollinate themselves.
- Polyploid-
- A cell, tissue, individual, population, or whole species having more than
twice the basic number oex” of chromosomes of the ancestral species.
Polyploidy may lead to increased growth rates (Populus) or severe
dwarfing (Pinus). Three sets of chromosomes is called triploid, four
sets-tetraploid, six sets-hexaploid, etc. (See chromosome
number.)
- Population-
- A group of individual trees having some characteristics in common, either
location, family ancestry, or intended use.
- Progeny test-
- A test to compare the offspring of different parents. (See backward
selection.)
- Propagule-
- Any type of plant to be used for reproduction. It might be a seedling, a
rooted or unrooted cutting, a graft, or a tissue-cultured plantlet.
- Provenance test-
- A test comparing trees grown from seed or cuttings collected in many parts
of a species range. (See seed
source.)
- Race-
- A sub-population, usually fairly large, of a species exhibiting some
degree of phenotypic (and presumably genotypic) uniformity among individuals
within the population and distinct from the species as a whole.
- Ramet-
- A vegetatively reproduced copy of a plant. Each ramet will have almost
precisely the same genotype as the original parent tree, known as the ortet.
(See clone
and ortet.)
- Randomized complete-block design-
- The most common experimental design used in progeny, provenance and clonal
field tests. Each entry in the test is replicated once in each block. All the
entries are arranged randomly within a block and a new randomization pattern
is used for each block. (See replication,
block,
and plot.)
- Reciprocal cross -
- The repetition of a cross where the sexual function of the parents is
reversed, i.e., female B x male A is the reciprocal of female A x male
B.
- Recurrent selection-
- Selection of individuals or families and intermating them or allowing them
to interpollinate to produce the next generation. Usually the process
is repeated several times (for long-lived perennials such as trees) or many
times (for annuals.) The technique is used to improve the overall performance
of the population rather than to select outstanding varieties for immediate
use.
- Replication-
- In a genetics test a replication contains one plot of each entry in the
test. (See Randomized
block design , block,
and plot.)
- Resilience-
- The ability of a population to persist in a given environment despite
disturbance or reduced population size. The resilience of a population is
based upon the ability of individuals within the population to survive
(fitness) and reproduce (fecundity) in a changed environment and the genetic
variability of the population which allows the production of new
genotypes.
- Rogue-
- To remove trees that have an undesirable phenotype, or that have been
shown through progeny tests to have a less desirable genotype from a seed
orchard, seed production area, or nursery bed.
- Rootstock-
- A rooted plant, usually a seedling, on which a scion is grafted.
- Scion-
- A twig, bud, or other vegetative cutting to be grafted onto the
root-system of another plant. (See seed
orchard, ramet,
and clone.)
- Screening-
- Selecting for a particular trait, often used when referring to the
application of a specific treatment such as white pine blister rust spores or
a herbicide, and then looking for resistant individuals. Usually implies
checking large number of individuals at one time.
- Seed orchard-
- A plantation established for the production of tree seed.
- Seed orchard, clonal-
- A seed orchard established from vegetatively propagated trees, usually
grafts. Usually clonal seed orchards are established with single-tree plots
with different ramets of each clone located as far apart as possible to reduce
self pollination.
- Seed orchard, seedling-
- A seed orchard established from seedlings (as opposed to grafts). Usually
seedling seed orchards are established with multiple-tree plots so that
selection can take place first among families and then among the individuals
within each family plot, reducing each plot to a single tree.
- Seed production area-
- A stand or plantation not originally planted to produce seed, but rogued
of inferior trees and treated in such a manner as to produce large quantities
of seed. Usually the stand or plantation is from a known origin or selected
seedlot.
- Seed source-
- The location where a seedlot was collected. If different seedlots of an
exotic species are collected and tested, the test is called a seed-source test
to distinguish it from a provenance test.
- Seed transfer guide-
- A set of rules for collecting seed and planting seedlings so that
genotypes are not moved to microclimates or soils within which they will be
mis-adapted. Usually seed transfer guides describe the maximum movement from
the point of collection in miles east and west, north and south as well as
feet in elevation. (See seed
zones.)
- Seed zone-
- An area within which seed can be collected from any natural stand and
planted in any new site without fear of mis-adaptation.
- Seedlot-
- A designation of a group of seeds with some factor in common, i.e., year
of collection, stand or seed orchard, individual "+" trees, point of origin in
a provenance test, a half- or full-sib family.
- Selection differential-
- The difference between a selected tree, family, or clone and the average
of the population from which it is taken.
- Selection-
- Choosing individual trees or populations with desirable characters to
obtain genetic improvement.
- Selection, clonal-
- Choosing the best clones from a clonal test.
- Selection, index-
- Choosing parents on the basis of a weighted score which combines economic
value and heritability of several desirable traits.
- Selection, mass-
- (phenotypic selection) Choosing trees on the basis of their phenotypes
(appearance) alone.
- Selection, recurrent-
- Choosing individuals out of families, making crosses, then progeny
testing. The process is usually repeated several to many times. Most tree
improvement programs are based on recurrent selection.
- Selection, tandem-
- Selecting for two or more traits sequentially rather than simultaneously.
The technique is useful when one trait can be evaluated early and a second
trait only after a number of years, or when one trait is much more expensive
to measure.
- Self pollination-
- The natural or artificial pollination of a female flower with pollen from
the same genotype. (See inbreeding,
outcrossing,
and homozygosity.)
- Sib-
- (sibling) A term meaning brother or sister. Half sibs have one parent in
common. Full sibs have both parents in common.
- Sublining-
- Dividing a breeding population into several to many smaller populations.
All controlled crosses for forward selection are made within a subline,
leading to inbreeding within sublines. Production seed orchards are planted
with clones or seedlings from several to many sublines to minimize inbreeding
in the production orchard.
- Tissue culture-
- A technique for cultivation cells, tissues, or organs of plants in a
sterile, synthetic medium; includes the tissues excised from a plant and the
culture of pollen or seeds.
- Unbalanced-
- In experimental design, refers to an experiment or set of data in which
all treatments or treatment combinations are not equally represented. The most
common cause of unbalanced experiments is unequal mortality among entries in a
test. (See randomized-block
design and replication.)
Also used to describe any plant breeder specializing in an organism with
nearly as long a life cycle as his or her own.
- Variability-
- Differing from the average value. Absence of uniformity, usually referring
to lack of genetic uniformity in a population. (See heterozygosity
and resilience.)
- Variance-
- A statistical measure of variability.
- Variety-
- A distinctive seedling population or clone, usually one that possesses
enough desirable characteristics to be commonly cultivated. In agriculture and
horticulture all the plants within a variety would usually be quite uniform
genetically. In forestry the term is more loosely used and the variability
within a seedling variety is usually much greater.
- Vegetative propagation-
- Propagation of a plant by asexual means, as in budding, dividing,
grafting, rooting, and air layering. (See clone)
- Viability-
- A populations ability to live, grow and develop. It is affected by
physical habitat factors (climate, geology, topography, and aquatic features)
and by biotic habitat factors (plant and animal populations and
communities).
- Wind pollination-
- Pollination by wind-borne pollen.