4.7 Article

Rare arctic-alpine plants of the European Alps have different immigration histories:: the snow bed species Minuartia biflora and Ranunculus pygmaeus

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 3, Pages 709-720

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2006.02821.x

Keywords

arctic-alpine; comparative phylogeography; European Alps; founder event; plant; migrations; Quaternary glaciations

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Minuartia biflora and Ranunculus pygmaeus are circumarctic plants with a few isolated occurrences in the European Alps. We analysed amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) and chloroplast DNA sequence data to unravel the history of their immigration into the Alps and to provide data on their circumpolar phylogeography. In spite of the similar ecological requirements of the two species, they exhibit strikingly different immigration histories into the Alps. In M. biflora, the Alpine populations are most probably derived from source populations located between the Alpine and Scandinavian ice sheets, in accordance with the traditional biogeographic hypothesis. In contrast, the Alpine populations of R. pygmaeus cluster with those from the Tatra Mountains and the Taymyr region in northern Siberia, indicating that the distant Taymyr area served as source for the Alpine populations. Both species showed different levels of genetic diversity in formerly glaciated areas. In contrast to the considerable AFLP diversity observed in M. biflora, R. pygmaeus was virtually nonvariable over vast areas, with a single phenotype dominating all over the Alps and another, distantly related one dominating the North Atlantic area from Greenland over Svalbard to Scandinavia. The same pattern was observed in chloroplast DNA sequence data. Thus, postglacial colonization of R. pygmaeus was accompanied by extreme founder events.

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