4.5 Article

Phylogeography of the East Asian grassland plant, Viola orientalis (Violaceae), inferred from plastid and nuclear restriction site-associated DNA sequencing data

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT RESEARCH
Volume 134, Issue 6, Pages 1181-1198

Publisher

SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s10265-021-01339-8

Keywords

DdRAD-seq; Genetic structure; Grassland; Japanese flora; Migration history; Population genetics

Categories

Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [JP17H03721]
  2. Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University [3037, 3140, R236]

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The study revealed that Viola orientalis originated in northeastern Asia and spread southward through the Korean Peninsula to the Japanese Islands during the last glacial period. This finding supports the previously proposed evolutionary hypothesis regarding the origin and migration routes of the Mansen elements.
To elucidate the origin and migration history of the Mansen elements, a group of temperate grassland plants mainly distributed in northeastern Asia, phylogeographic analyses based on chloroplast DNA markers and double-digest restriction site-associated DNA sequencing (ddRAD-seq) data were performed on Viola orientalis, one of the representative species of the group. Phylogenetic analyses using ddRAD-seq data revealed that the populations of V. orientalis were clustered into five clades, among which the continental clades made of populations from Russia and Korea diverged more than 100,000 years earlier than the Japanese clades. The Japanese clade likely diverged during the last glacial period, followed by a further post-glacial divergence into the Kyushu and the Honshu subclades. Our study demonstrated that V. orientalis originated in the continental area of northeastern Asia and, during the last glacial period, has spread southward through the Korean Peninsula across the Japanese Islands. This finding supports the previously proposed evolutionary hypothesis regarding the origin and migration routes of the Mansen elements.

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