Data from: Habitat preference differentiates the Holocene range dynamics but not barrier effects on two sympatric, congeneric trees (Tristaniopsis, Myrtaceae)
Niche partitioning can lead to differences in the range dynamics of plant species through its impacts on habitat availability, dispersal, or selection for traits that affect colonization and persistence. We investigated whether niche partitioning into upland and riparian habitats differentiates the...
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Zusammenfassung: | Niche partitioning can lead to differences in the range dynamics of plant
species through its impacts on habitat availability, dispersal, or
selection for traits that affect colonization and persistence. We
investigated whether niche partitioning into upland and riparian habitats
differentiates the range dynamics of two closely related and sympatric
eastern Australian trees: the mountain water gum (Tristaniopsis collina)
and the water gum (T. laurina). Using genomic data from SNP genotyping of
480 samples, we assessed the impact of biogeographic barriers and tested
for signals of range expansion. Circuit theory was used to model
isolation-by-resistance across three palaeo-environment scenarios: the
Last Glacial Maximum, the Holocene Climate Optimum and present-day
(1950-2014). Both trees showed similar genetic structure across
historically dry barriers, despite evidence of significant environmental
niche differentiation and different post-glacial habitat shifts.
Tristaniopsis collina exhibits the signature of serial founder effects
consistent with recent or rapid range expansion, whilst T. laurina has
genetic patterns consistent with long-term persistence in geographically
isolated populations despite occupying a broader bioclimatic niche. We
found the minor influence of isolation-by-resistance on both species,
though other unknown factors appear to shape genetic variation. We
postulate that specialized recruitment traits (adapted to
flood-disturbance regimes) rather than habitat availability limited
post-glacial range expansion in T. laurina. Our findings indicate that
niche breadth does not always facilitate range expansion through
colonization and migration across barriers, though it can promote
long-term persistence in situ. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.0p6bj53 |