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Range‐wide genetic structure in a north‐east Asian spruce ( Picea jezoensis ) determined using nuclear microsatellite markers
Author(s) -
Aizawa Mineaki,
Yoshimaru Hiroshi,
Saito Hideyuki,
Katsuki Toshio,
Kawahara Takayuki,
Kitamura Keiko,
Shi Fuchen,
Sabirov Renat,
Kaji Mikio
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of biogeography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.7
H-Index - 158
eISSN - 1365-2699
pISSN - 0305-0270
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2699.2008.02074.x
Subject(s) - biology , genetic diversity , microsatellite , population , range (aeronautics) , genetic structure , population bottleneck , ecology , zoology , allele , genetics , demography , materials science , sociology , composite material , gene
Aim  We used microsatellite markers to determine the range‐wide genetic structure of Picea jezoensis and to test the hypothesis that the past population history of this widespread cold‐temperate spruce has resulted in a low level of genetic variation and in imprints of inbreeding and bottlenecks in isolated marginal populations. Location  The natural range of the three infraspecific taxa of P. jezoensis throughout north‐east Asia, including isolated marginal populations. Methods  We analysed a total of 990 individuals across 33 natural populations using four nuclear microsatellite loci. Population genetic structure was assessed by analysing genetic diversity indices for each population, examining clustering (model‐based and distance‐based) among populations, evaluating signals of recent bottlenecks, and testing for isolation by distance (IBD). Results  The 33 populations were clustered into five groups. The isolated marginal groups of populations (in Kamchatka, Kii in Japan and South Korea) exhibited low levels of allelic richness and gene diversity and a complete or almost complete loss of rare alleles. A recent bottleneck was detected in the populations in Hokkaido across to mid‐Sakhalin. The IBD analysis revealed that genetic divergence between populations was higher for populations separated by straits. Main conclusions  Picea jezoensis showed a higher level of genetic differentiation among populations ( F ST  = 0.101) than that observed in the genus Picea in general. This might be attributable to the fact that historically the straits around Japan acted as barriers to the movement of seeds and pollen. The low levels of genetic diversity in the isolated marginal population groups may reflect genetic drift that has occurred after isolation. Evidence of a significant bottleneck between the Hokkaido and mid‐Sakhalin populations implies that the cold, dry climate in the late Pleistocene resulted in the decline and contraction of populations, and that there was a subsequent expansion followed by a founder effect when conditions improved. The high polymorphism observed in P. jezoensis nuclear microsatellites revealed cryptic genetic structure that organellar DNA markers failed to identify in a previous study.

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