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Understanding population structure and historical demography in a conservation context: Population genetics of the endangered Kirengeshoma palmata (Hydrangeaceae)
Author(s) -
Yuan Na,
Sun Yi,
Comes HansPeter,
Fu ChengXin,
Qiu YingXiong
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.3732/ajb.1400043
Subject(s) - biology , genetic drift , ecology , population , population fragmentation , effective population size , gene flow , inbreeding depression , genetic diversity , inbreeding , demographic history , biological dispersal , genetic structure , population genetics , outcrossing , small population size , evolutionary biology , demography , pollen , habitat , sociology
• Premise of the study: Both historical and contemporary microevolutionary processes greatly influence the genetic patterns of East Asian plant endemics, but the spatial and temporal contexts of these processes remain poorly understood. Here, we investigate the relative influences of historical and contemporary gene flow and drift on the population genetic structure of Kirengeshoma palmata , a perennial herb from East China and South Japan. • Methods: We used data from nine polymorphic microsatellite loci to assess the levels of genetic diversity, effective population size, and contemporary and historical gene flow for six of the seven known populations. • Key results: We found high levels of inbreeding and allelic diversity within populations. Both contemporary and historical migration rates among populations were low, and a test of alternate models of population history strongly favored a model of long‐term drift–migration equilibrium. We inferred declines in population size ca. 10 000–100 000 yr ago, but failed to detect recent declines. Bayesian clustering divided K. palmata populations into three genetic clusters, two of which were consistent with a glacial refugium hypothesis for two mountain ranges in East China. • Conclusions: These results suggest that anthropogenic fragmentation has had little effect on the genetic characteristics of Chinese K. palmata . Rather, past decline in population size due to Late Pleistocene climate change as well as restricted pollen and seed dispersal may have contributed to low levels of both historical and contemporary gene flow, resulting in high genetic differentiation between adjacent mountain ranges due to genetic drift and inbreeding.

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