International Scientific Conference: Genetics to the rescue. Managing forests sustainably in a changing world
Genetic diversity is a key component of resilience and adaptability. Overall, forest tree populations are genetically very diverse, conferring them an enormous potential for genetic adaptation via such processes as gene flow and natural selection. What remain largely unknown are the scale and pace at which local adaptation occurs in forest trees and whether adaptation and resilience for some traits conflicts with adaptation and resilience for others. Without this basic knowledge, innovative and science-based management and policy approaches will lag behind the pace of environmental and societal constraints.
Access to large scale genomic, phenotypic, environmental and policy data have the potential of opening new dimensions in how adaptation and resilience is studied. Focusing primarily but not exclusively on forest trees, the conference will showcase some of the key results made during the past few years in the field of evolutionary sciences that can inform sustainable forest management and policy.
The conference days are built around four topical sessions:
- Genomes and the environment
- Local adaptation of climate change-related traits
- Conserving and using genetic diversity
- Evolutionary management of forests
Be sure to visit our website https://colloque.inra.fr/confgentree2020/ and see what other events take place during the week: we are offering a genomics training and Wikipedia editing session.
The conference is organized by the H2020 project GenTree (http://www.gentree-h2020.eu/).
Keywords
genetics, sustainable forest management, genetic diversity, adaptation, climate change, resilience