4.5 Article

Past climatic refugia and landscape resistance explain spatial genetic structure in Oriental beech in the South Caucasus

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 12, 期 9, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.9320

关键词

conservation genetics; Fagus orientalis; genetic structure; habitat stability; landscape genetics; species distribution modeling

资金

  1. National Science Centre [2017/26/E/NZ8/01049]
  2. Poznan University of Life Sciences
  3. Institute of Dendrology, Polish Academy of Sciences

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Predicting the effects of climatic changes on species requires understanding the factors shaping the spatial genetic composition. In this study, we found that the colonization history is the most important driver of the genetic pattern of Oriental beech, and local climate also influences the genetic composition. The loss of genetic resources due to projected habitat loss may increase the vulnerability of the Azerbaijan and Hyrcanian populations to environmental change, which could ultimately affect the species' adaptation and the stability of forest ecosystems in the Caucasus ecoregion.
Predicting species-level effects of climatic changes requires unraveling the factors affecting the spatial genetic composition. However, disentangling the relative contribution of historical and contemporary drivers is challenging. By applying landscape genetics and species distribution modeling, we investigated processes that shaped the neutral genetic structure of Oriental beech (Fagus orientalis), aiming to assess the potential risks involved due to possible future distribution changes in the species. Using nuclear microsatellites, we analyze 32 natural populations from the Georgia and Azerbaijan (South Caucasus). We found that the species colonization history is the most important driver of the genetic pattern. The detected west-east gradient of genetic differentiation corresponds strictly to the Colchis and Hyrcanian glacial refugia. A significant signal of associations to environmental variables suggests that the distinct genetic composition of the Azerbaijan and Hyrcanian stands might also be structured by the local climate. Oriental beech retains an overall high diversity; however, in the context of projected habitat loss, its genetic resources might be greatly impoverished. The most affected are the Azerbaijan and Hyrcanian populations, for which the detected genetic impoverishment may enhance their vulnerability to environmental change. Given the adaptive potential of range-edge populations, the loss of these populations may ultimately affect the specie's adaptation, and thus the stability and resilience of forest ecosystems in the Caucasus ecoregion. Our study is the first approximation of the potential risks involved, inducing far-reaching conclusions about the need of maintaining the genetic resources of Oriental beech for a species' capacity to cope with environmental change.

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