4.5 Article

Marked genetic divergence among sky island populations of Sedum lanceolatum (Crassulaceae) in the rocky mountains

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
Volume 92, Issue 3, Pages 477-486

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.92.3.477

Keywords

alpine; climate cycles; cpDNA; Crassulaceae; genetic diversity; historical biogeography; quaternary; Rocky Mountain refuge; Sedum lanceolatum

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Climate change during the Quaternary played an important role in the differentiation and evolution of planus. A prevailing hypothesis is that alpine and arctic species survived glacial periods in refugia at the periphery of glaciers. Though the Rocky Mountains, south of the southernmost extent of continental ice, served as an important glacial refuge, little is known about how climate cycles influenced populations within this region. We inferred the phylogeography of Sedum lanceolatum (Crassulaceae) within the Rocky Mountain refugium to assess how this high-elevation plant responded to glacial cycles. We sequenced 884 base pairs (bp) of cpDNA intergenic spacers (tRNA-L to tRNA-F and tRNA-S to tRNA-G) for 333 individuals from 18 alpine populations. Our highly variable markers allowed us to infer that populations persisted across the latitudinal range throughout the climate cycles, exhibited significant genetic structure, and experienced cycles of range expansion and fragmentation. Genetic differentiation in S. lanceolatum was most likely a product of short-distance elevational migration in response to climate change, low seed dispersal, and vegetative reproduction. To the extent that Sedum is a good model system, paleoclimatic cycles were probably a major factor preserving genetic variation and promoting divergence in high-elevation flora of the Rocky Mountains.

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