Long-distance dispersal explains the bipolar disjunction in Carex macloviana

PREMISE OF THE STUDY: The sedge Carex macloviana d'Urv presents a bipolar distribution. To clarify the origin of its distribution, we consider the four main hypotheses: long‐distance dispersal (either by mountain hopping or by direct dispersal), vicariance, parallel evolution, and human introdu...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of botany 2017-05, Vol.104 (5), p.663-673
Hauptverfasser: Márquez-Corro, José I., Escudero, Marcial, Martín-Bravo, Santiago, Villaverde, Tamara, Luceño, Modesto
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:PREMISE OF THE STUDY: The sedge Carex macloviana d'Urv presents a bipolar distribution. To clarify the origin of its distribution, we consider the four main hypotheses: long‐distance dispersal (either by mountain hopping or by direct dispersal), vicariance, parallel evolution, and human introduction. METHODS: Phylogenetic, phylogeographic, and divergence time estimation analyses were carried out based on two nuclear ribosomal (ETS and ITS) regions, one nuclear single copy gene (CATP), and three plastid DNA regions (rps16 and 5′trnK introns, and psbA‐trnH spacer), using Bayesian inference, maximum likelihood, and statistical parsimony. Bioclimatic data were used to characterize the climatic niche of C. macloviana. KEY RESULTS: Carex macloviana constitutes a paraphyletic species, dating back to the Pleistocene (0.62 Mya, 95% highest posterior density: 0.29–1.00 Mya). This species displays strong genetic structure between hemispheres, with two different lineages in the Southern Hemisphere and limited genetic differentiation in Northern Hemisphere populations. Also, populations from the Southern Hemisphere show a narrower climatic niche with regards to the Northern Hemisphere populations. CONCLUSIONS: Carex macloviana reached its bipolar distribution by long‐distance dispersal, although it was not possible to determine whether it was caused by mountain hopping or by direct dispersal. While there is some support that Carex macloviana might have colonized the Northern Hemisphere by south‐to‐north transhemisphere dispersal during the Pleistocene, unlike the southwards dispersal pattern inferred for other bipolar Carex L. species, we cannot entirely rule out north‐to‐south dispersion.
ISSN:0002-9122
1537-2197
DOI:10.3732/ajb.1700012