Haplotype diversity patterns in Quercus suber (Fagaceae) inferred from cpDNA sequence data

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Titel: Haplotype diversity patterns in Quercus suber (Fagaceae) inferred from cpDNA sequence data
Autoren: Sousa, Filipe, Viegas, Mariana Bray, Costa, Joana, Marques, Isabel, Pina-Martins, Simões, Fernanda, Matos, José, Glushkova, Maria, Miguel, Célia, Veloso, Maria Manuela, Oliveira, M. Margarida, Ricardo, Cândido Pinto, Batista, Dora, Paulo, Octávio S.
Verlagsinformationen: Springer
Publikationsjahr: 2024
Bestand: Universidade de Lisboa: repositório.UL
Schlagwörter: Glacial refugia, Introgression, Lineage sorting, Mediterranean, Oak forests, Phylogeography
Beschreibung: Chloroplast genome diversity in cork oak (Quercus suber) is characterised by the occurrence of haplotypes that are akin to those found in other Mediterranean oak species, particularly in Q. ilex and Q. rotundifolia, suggesting the possible presence of an introgressed chloroplast lineage. To further investigate this pattern, we reconstructed chloroplast haplotypes by sequencing four chloroplast markers (cpDNA), sampled across 181 individuals and 10 taxa. Our analyses resulted in the identification of two diversified chloroplast haplogroups in Q. suber, corresponding to a geographically widespread lineage and an Afro-Iberian lineage. Time-calibrated phylogenetic analyses of cpDNA point to a Miocene origin of the two haplogroups in Q. suber, suggesting that the Afro-Iberian lineage was present in cork oak before the onset of glaciation periods. The persistence of the two haplogroups in the western part of the species distribution range may be a consequence of either ancient introgression events or chloroplast lineage sorting, combined with different fixation in refugia through glaciation periods. Our results provide a comprehensive insight on the origins of chloroplast diversity in these ecologically and economically important Mediterranean oaks. ; info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Publikationsart: article in journal/newspaper
Sprache: English
Relation: Keep Pace: Selection of trees keeping pace with fast environmental changes, a science-based approach for sustainable XXI century Oak forests’, co-funded by the EU ERDF funds, within the Portugal 2020 Partnership Agreement and Programa Operacional Regional Algarve; FCT ALG-01-0145-FEDER-029263 / PTDC/ASP/ SIL/29263/2017; FCT PTDC/AGR-GPL/104966/2008; FCT SOBREIRO/0036/2009; FCT GREEN-IT; FCT UIDB/04551/2020; FCT UIDB/00329/2020; Open access funding provided by FCT%7CFCCN (b-on); http://hdl.handle.net/10451/61722
DOI: 10.1007/s00606-023-01879-7
Verfügbarkeit: http://hdl.handle.net/10451/61722
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00606-023-01879-7
Rights: openAccess ; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Dokumentencode: edsbas.6E6AE3F4
Datenbank: BASE
Beschreibung
Abstract:Chloroplast genome diversity in cork oak (Quercus suber) is characterised by the occurrence of haplotypes that are akin to those found in other Mediterranean oak species, particularly in Q. ilex and Q. rotundifolia, suggesting the possible presence of an introgressed chloroplast lineage. To further investigate this pattern, we reconstructed chloroplast haplotypes by sequencing four chloroplast markers (cpDNA), sampled across 181 individuals and 10 taxa. Our analyses resulted in the identification of two diversified chloroplast haplogroups in Q. suber, corresponding to a geographically widespread lineage and an Afro-Iberian lineage. Time-calibrated phylogenetic analyses of cpDNA point to a Miocene origin of the two haplogroups in Q. suber, suggesting that the Afro-Iberian lineage was present in cork oak before the onset of glaciation periods. The persistence of the two haplogroups in the western part of the species distribution range may be a consequence of either ancient introgression events or chloroplast lineage sorting, combined with different fixation in refugia through glaciation periods. Our results provide a comprehensive insight on the origins of chloroplast diversity in these ecologically and economically important Mediterranean oaks. ; info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
DOI:10.1007/s00606-023-01879-7