Origin area and migration route: Chloroplast DNA diversity in the arctic-alpine plant Koenigia islandica

被引:0
|
作者
Cong Long
YunJiang Min
XiuXia Zhao
ChunLei Yany
Hang Sun
HouYuan Lü
LingYu Tang
ZhongZe Zhou
机构
[1] Anhui University,School of Resources and Environmental Engineering
[2] Anhui Biodiversity Information Center,Department of Biological and Pharmaceutical Engineering
[3] West Anhui University,Key Laboratory for Plant Diversity and Biogeography of East Asia, Kunming Institute of Botany
[4] Chinese Academy of Sciences,Institute of Geology and Geophysics
[5] Chinese Academy of Sciences,Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology
[6] Chinese Academy of Sciences,undefined
来源
关键词
origin area; refugia; migration route; phylogeography; biogeology;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The Hengduan Mountains (henceforth H-D Mountains) on the Tibet Plateau are a distribution and diversity center for many alpine genera. We examine patterns of genetic variation in an arctic-alpine plant to evaluate the possibility that the H-D Mountains constitute the area of origin of the species as well as to uncover postglacial migration routes. 220 individuals of the arctic-alpine plant Koenigia islandica were sampled from 26 populations distributed in western China and northern Finland. DNA haplotypes were identified using restriction site analysis of two chloroplast DNA intergene spacer regions, atpB-rbcL and trnL-trnF. We examined the geographical distribution of haplotype diversity in relation to latitude, and also compared various indices of diversity in putatively glaciated and unglaciated regions. Patterns of migration were inferred using nested clade analysis. A total of 25 haplotypes were detected. High haplotype diversity was found in the H-D Mountains. H3 and its radiated haplotypes were distributed in the Himalayas. Two haplotypes were fixed concurrently in the H-D Mountains and northern Finland. High genetic diversity of K. islandica and high species diversity of K. islandica are expected in the origin area. Our observations suggest that the H-D Mountains are not only the place of origin of K. islandica, but also the refugia for K. islandica on the Tibet Plateau. What is more, the migration route for the arctic-alpine plant K. islandica must have originated in the region defined by the H-D Mountains in western China extending northward to the Arctic circumpolar, and moved westward along the Himalayas, then northward across the Altay Mountains and the Central Siberian Plateau at different time periods.
引用
收藏
页码:1760 / 1770
页数:10
相关论文
共 9 条
  • [1] Origin area and migration route: Chloroplast DNA diversity in the arctic-alpine plant Koenigia islandica
    LONG Cong
    MIN YunJiang
    ZHAO XiuXia
    YANY ChunLei
    SUN Hang
    Lü HouYuan
    TANG LingYu
    ZHOU ZhongZe
    ScienceChina(EarthSciences), 2014, 57 (08) : 1760 - 1770
  • [2] Origin area and migration route: Chloroplast DNA diversity in the arctic-alpine plant Koenigia islandica
    Long Cong
    Min YunJiang
    Zhao XiuXia
    Yany ChunLei
    Sun Hang
    Lu HouYuan
    Tang LingYu
    Zhou ZhongZe
    SCIENCE CHINA-EARTH SCIENCES, 2014, 57 (08) : 1760 - 1770
  • [3] Divergent Norms of Reaction to Temperature in Germination Characteristics among Populations of the Arctic-Alpine Annual, Koenigia islandica
    Wagner, Ioan
    Simons, Andrew M.
    ARCTIC ANTARCTIC AND ALPINE RESEARCH, 2009, 41 (03) : 388 - 395
  • [4] Refugia in the Cordilleran ice sheet of western North America:: chloroplast DNA diversity in the Arctic-alpine plant Oxyria digyna
    Marr, Kendrick L.
    Allen, Geraldine A.
    Hebda, Richard J.
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2008, 35 (07) : 1323 - 1334
  • [5] Intraspecific divergence in seed germination traits between high- and low-latitude populations of the arctic-alpine annual Koenigia islandica
    Wagner, Ioan
    Simons, Andrew M.
    ARCTIC ANTARCTIC AND ALPINE RESEARCH, 2008, 40 (01) : 233 - 239
  • [6] Intercontinental migration pattern and genetic differentiation of arctic-alpine Rhodiola rosea L.: A chloroplast DNA survey
    Gyorgy, Zsuzsanna
    Toth, Endre G.
    Incze, Norbert
    Molnar, Bence
    Hohn, Maria
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2018, 8 (23): : 11508 - 11521
  • [7] Investigating cytoskeletal function in chloroplast protrusion formation in the arctic-alpine plant Oxyria digyna
    Holzinger, A.
    Wasteneys, G. O.
    Lutz, C.
    PLANT BIOLOGY, 2007, 9 (03) : 400 - 410
  • [8] Late Pleistocene origin of the entire circumarctic range of the arctic-alpine plant Kalmia procumbens
    Ikeda, Hajime
    Eidesen, Pernille Bronken
    Yakubov, Valentin
    Barkalov, Vyacheslav
    Brochmann, Christian
    Setoguchi, Hiroaki
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2017, 26 (20) : 5773 - 5783
  • [9] Geographical origins, migration patterns and refugia of Sibbaldia procumbens, an arctic-alpine plant with a fragmented range
    Allen, Geraldine A.
    Marr, Kendrick L.
    McCormick, Laurie J.
    Hebda, Richard J.
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2015, 42 (09) : 1665 - 1676