Past climate changes explain the phylogeography of Vitellaria paradoxa over Africa

被引:0
作者
F Allal
H Sanou
L Millet
A Vaillant
L Camus-Kulandaivelu
Z A Logossa
F Lefèvre
J-M Bouvet
机构
[1] Research Unit ‘Genetic Diversity and Breeding of Forest Tree Species’,Cirad
[2] International Campus of Baillarguet,Bios Department
[3] Institut d’Economie Rurale,undefined
[4] Forest Resource Programme,undefined
[5] Regional Agronomical Research Centre of Sotuba,undefined
[6] University of Lomé,undefined
[7] INRA,undefined
[8] URFM,undefined
[9] Ecologie des Forêts Méditerranéennes,undefined
来源
Heredity | 2011年 / 107卷
关键词
intergenic spacers; microsatellite markers; last glacial maximum; phylogeography; sub-Sahelian Africa;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The evolution of the savanna biome has been deeply marked by repeated contraction/expansion phases due to climate perturbations during the Quaternary period. In this study, we investigated the impact of the last glacial maximum (LGM) on the present genetic pattern of Vitellaria paradoxa (shea tree), a major African savanna tree. A range-wide sampling of the species enabled us to sample 374 individuals from 71 populations distributed throughout sub-Sahelian Africa. Trees were genotyped using 3 chloroplasts and 12 nuclear microsatellites, and were sequenced for 2 polymorphic chloroplast intergenic spacers. Analyses of genetic diversity and structure were based on frequency-based and Bayesian methods. Potential distributions of V. paradoxa at present, during the LGM and the last interglacial period, were examined using DIVA-GIS ecological niche modelling (ENM). Haplotypic and allelic richness varied significantly across the range according to chloroplast and nuclear microsatellites, which pointed to higher diversity in West Africa. A high but contrasted level of differentiation was revealed among populations with a clear phylogeographic signal, with both nuclear (FST=0.21; RST=0.28; RST>RST (permuted)) and chloroplast simple sequence repeats (SSRs) (GST=0.81; NST=0.90; NST>NST (permuted)). We identified a strong geographically related structure separating western and eastern populations, and a substructure in the eastern part of the area consistent with subspecies distinction. Using ENM, we deduced that perturbations during the LGM fragmented the potential eastern distribution of shea tree, but not its distribution in West Africa. Our main results suggest that climate variations are the major factor explaining the genetic pattern of V. paradoxa.
引用
收藏
页码:174 / 186
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] A continuous record of vegetation and climate change over the past 50,000 years in the Fujian Province of eastern subtropical China
    Yue, Yuanfu
    Zheng, Zhuo
    Huang, Kangyou
    Chevalier, Manuel
    Chase, Brian M.
    Carre, Matthieu
    Ledru, Marie-Pierre
    Cheddadi, Rachid
    PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY, 2012, 365 : 115 - 123
  • [42] Climate and environmental changes for the past 44 ka clarified by pollen and algae composition in the Ulleung Basin, East Sea (Japan Sea)
    Chen, Jinxia
    Liu, Yanguang
    Shi, Xuefa
    Suk, Bong-Chool
    Zou, Jianjun
    Yao, Zhengquan
    QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL, 2017, 441 : 162 - 173
  • [43] Long-term decrease in Asian monsoon rainfall and abrupt climate change events over the past 6,700 years
    Yang, Bao
    Qin, Chun
    Braeuning, Achim
    Osborn, Timothy J.
    Trouet, Valerie
    Ljungqvist, Fredrik Charpentier
    Esper, Jan
    Schneider, Lea
    Griessinger, Jussi
    Buentgen, Ulf
    Rossi, Sergio
    Dong, Guanghui
    Yan, Mi
    Ning, Liang
    Wang, Jianglin
    Wang, Xiaofeng
    Wang, Suming
    Luterbacher, Juerg
    Cook, Edward R.
    Stenseth, Nils Chr
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2021, 118 (30)
  • [44] A diatom-conductivity transfer function for reconstructing past changes in the Southern Hemisphere westerly winds over the Southern Ocean
    Saunders, Krystyna M.
    Hodgson, Dominic A.
    Mcmurtrie, Shelley
    Grosjean, Martin
    JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE, 2015, 30 (05) : 464 - 477
  • [45] Changes in Atmospheric Dynamics Over Dansgaard-Oeschger Climate Oscillations Around 40 ka and Their Impact on Europe
    Stadelmaier, Kim H.
    Ludwig, Patrick
    Pinto, Joaquim G.
    Ujvari, Gabor
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2024, 129 (03)
  • [46] Paleoclimate Changes in the Pacific Northwest Over the Past 36,000 Years From Clumped Isotope Measurements and Model Analysis
    Lopez-Maldonado, Ricardo
    Bateman, Jesse Bloom
    Ellis, Andre
    Bader, Nicholas E.
    Ramirez, Pedro
    Arnold, Alexandrea
    Ajoku, Osinachi
    Lee, Hung-, I
    Jesmok, Gregory
    Upadhyay, Deepshikha
    Mitsunaga, Bryce
    Elliott, Ben
    Tabor, Clay
    Tripati, Aradhna
    PALEOCEANOGRAPHY AND PALEOCLIMATOLOGY, 2023, 38 (02)
  • [47] Form changes in Amiantis purpurata (Bivalvia, Veneridae) shells over the past 100,000 years in North Patagonia (Argentina)
    Bayer, M. Sol
    Morsan, Enrique
    Gordillo, Sandra
    Moran, Gisela
    JOURNAL OF THE MARINE BIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION OF THE UNITED KINGDOM, 2016, 96 (06) : 1243 - 1250
  • [48] Cocolithophores in marine sediments off the western entrance of the Strait of Magellan reveal changes in productivity over the past 30,000 years
    Sanchez, Gloria E.
    Lange, Carina B.
    Flores, Jose-Abel
    Caniupan, Magaly
    Lamy, Frank
    LATIN AMERICAN JOURNAL OF AQUATIC RESEARCH, 2014, 42 (05): : 1035 - 1049
  • [49] Precessional hydroclimatic synchronicity changes in the Indo-Pacific Warm Pool driven by the intertropical convergence zone over the past 450 kyr
    Qian, Fang
    Chang, Fengming
    Nuernberg, Dirk
    Zhang, Shuai
    Wang, Yi
    Zhang, Junru
    Tang, Luyao
    Li, Tiegang
    GEOLOGICAL MAGAZINE, 2024, 161
  • [50] Staged fine-grained sediment supply from the Himalayas to the Bengal Fan in response to climate change over the past 50,000 years
    Liu, Jianguo
    He, Wei
    Cao, Li
    Zhu, Zhu
    Xiang, Rong
    Li, Tiegang
    Shi, Xuefa
    Liu, Shengfa
    QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2019, 212 : 164 - 177