J 2015

High genetic diversity declines towards the geographic range periphery of Adonis vernalis, a Eurasian dry grassland plant

HIRSCH, Heidi, Viktoria WAGNER, Jiří DANIHELKA, Eszter RUPRECHT, Pedro SÁNCHEZ-GÓMEZ et. al.

Basic information

Original name

High genetic diversity declines towards the geographic range periphery of Adonis vernalis, a Eurasian dry grassland plant

Name in Czech

Genetická diverzita klesá směrem k okraji areálu Adonis vernalis, euroasijského druhu suchých trávníků

Authors

HIRSCH, Heidi (276 Germany), Viktoria WAGNER (276 Germany, guarantor, belonging to the institution), Jiří DANIHELKA (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution), Eszter RUPRECHT (642 Romania), Pedro SÁNCHEZ-GÓMEZ (724 Spain), Marco SEIFERT (276 Germany) and Isabell HENSEN (276 Germany)

Edition

Plant Biology, 2015, 1435-8603

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Článek v odborném periodiku

Field of Study

10600 1.6 Biological sciences

Country of publisher

United States of America

Confidentiality degree

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

Impact factor

Impact factor: 2.216

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14310/15:00083490

Organization unit

Faculty of Science

UT WoS

000363344100016

Keywords in English

Abundant centre model; amplified fragment length polymorphism; fragmentation; genetic differentiation; phylogeography; species distribution range.

Tags

Tags

Reviewed
Změněno: 16/2/2018 14:48, Ing. Jiří Danihelka, Ph.D.

Abstract

V originále

Genetic diversity is important for species’ fitness and evolutionary processes but our knowledge on how it varies across a species’ distribution range is limited. The abundant centre hypothesis (ACH) predicts that populations become smaller and more isolated towards the geographic range periphery – a pattern that in turn should be associated with decreasing genetic diversity and increasing genetic differentiation. We tested this hypothesis in Adonis vernalis, a dry grassland plant with an extensive Eurasian distribution. Its life-history traits and distribution characteristics suggest a low genetic diversity that decreases and a high genetic differentiation that increases towards the range edge. We analysed AFLP fingerprints in 28 populations along a 4698-km transect from the geographic range core in Russia to the western range periphery in Central and Western Europe. Contrary to our expectation, our analysis revealed high genetic diversity (range of proportion of polymorphic bands = 56–81%, He = 0.168–0.238) and low genetic differentiation across populations (phi ST = 0.18). However, in congruence with the genetic predictions of the ACH, genetic diversity decreased and genetic differentiation increased towards the range periphery. Spanish populations were genetically distinct, suggesting a divergent post-glacial history in this region. The high genetic diversity and low genetic differentiation in the remaining A. vernalis populations is surprising given the species’ life-history traits and points to the possibility that the species has been widely distributed in the studied region or that it has migrated from a diverse source in an East–West direction, in the past.

Files attached

Hirsch_et_al-2015-Plant_Biology.pdf
Request the author's version of the file