4.7 Article

Reticulate Evolution in the Western Mediterranean Mountain Ranges: The Case of the Leucanthemopsis Polyploid Complex

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2022.842842

Keywords

Anthemideae; AllCoPol; BEAST2; Leucanthemopsis; polyploidy; reticulate evolution; western Mediterranean

Categories

Funding

  1. German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)
  2. Elite Network of Bavaria (Elitenetzwerk Bayern)
  3. European Community [ES-TAF-1615]

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Polyploidization is a common mechanism of speciation in plants, especially in high mountain environments and areas affected by climatic oscillations. This study investigates the role of polyploidization in the Mediterranean region, revealing the relationship between polyploidization events and geological periods and geographical environments.
Polyploidization is one of the most common speciation mechanisms in plants. This is particularly relevant in high mountain environments and/or in areas heavily affected by climatic oscillations. Although the role of polyploidy and the temporal and geographical frameworks of polyploidization have been intensively investigated in the alpine regions of the temperate and arctic biomes, fewer studies are available with a specific focus on the Mediterranean region. Leucanthemopsis (Asteraceae) consists of six to ten species with several infraspecific entities, mainly distributed in the western Mediterranean Basin. It is a polyploid complex including montane, subalpine, and strictly alpine lineages, which are locally distributed in different mountain ranges of Western Europe and North Africa. We used a mixed approach including Sanger sequencing and (Roche-454) high throughput sequencing of amplicons to gather information from singlecopy nuclear markers and plastid regions. Nuclear regions were carefully tested for recombinants/PCR artifacts and for paralogy. Coalescent-based methods were used to infer the number of polyploidization events and the age of formation of polyploid lineages, and to reconstruct the reticulate evolution of the genus. Whereas the polyploids within the widespread Leucanthemopsis alpina are autopolyploids, the situation is more complex among the taxa endemic to the western Mediterranean. While the hexaploid, L. longipectinata, confined to the northern Moroccan mountain ranges (north-west Africa), is an autopolyploid, the Iberian polyploids are clearly of allopolyploid origins. At least two different polyploidization events gave rise to L. spathulifolia and to all other tetraploid Iberian taxa, respectively. The formation of the Iberian allopolyploids took place in the early Pleistocene and was probably caused by latitudinal and elevational range shifts that brought into contact previously isolated Leucanthemopsis lineages. Our study thus highlights the importance of the Pleistocene climatic oscillations and connected polyploidization events for the high plant diversity in the Mediterranean Basin.

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