4.1 Article

Molecular evidence for glacial expansion and interglacial retreat during Quaternary climatic changes in a montane temperate pine (Pinus kwangtungensis Chun ex Tsiang) in southern China

Journal

PLANT SYSTEMATICS AND EVOLUTION
Volume 284, Issue 3-4, Pages 219-229

Publisher

SPRINGER WIEN
DOI: 10.1007/s00606-009-0246-9

Keywords

Mitochondrial DNA; Phylogeography; Pinus kwangtungensis; Refugia; Quaternary

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [NSFC 30460020]
  2. Cultivation Programs for Young Scientists of Jiangxi Province [2008DQ01500]

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It has been suggested that the eastern Asian temperate flora have responded to Quaternary climatic changes in a different way compared with temperate plants in Europe and Northern America. However, knowledge about their phylogeographic structure and evolutionary history is still limited. In this study we investigated mitochondrial DNA variation in 17 populations of Pinus kwangtungensis, a five-needled pine inhabiting in isolated mountains of southern China and northern Vietnam. A total of ten mitochondrial haplotypes (mitotypes) were characterized by the polymorphisms of two fragments (cox-1-2 and nad7 intron1), and total genetic diversity was high (h (T) = 0.847). The construction of phylogenetic relationships of the ten mitotypes detected three major, well-distinct clades, largely corresponding to four population groups identified by SAMOVA analysis. SAMOVA also indicated that most genetic variance should be attributed to among-group differentiation (F (CT) = 0.868), consistent with the substantial genetic structure found within P. kwangtungensis (G (ST) = 0.751). The genetic distances of P. kwangtungensis weakly but significantly correlated with geographical distances (R = 0.228, P = 0.03), revealing a pattern of isolation-by-distance. Demographic analysis did not detect any bottleneck events in the recent history of P. kwangtungensis. These results clearly suggested that there were three major refugia for this montane temperate conifer during warm stages (along with other minor refugia), and that the species would have tracked Quaternary climatic changes by expanding to nearby lowlands in the glacial periods, and by retreating to mountaintops (the refugia) during interglacial warmer stages, experiencing fragmentation and isolation among refugia.

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