Napier Joseph D, Fernandez Matias C, de Lafontaine Guillaume, Hu Feng Sheng
Department of Plant Biology University of Illinois Urbana IL USA.
Department of Integrative Biology The University of Texas at Austin Austin TX USA.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Jan 23;10(3):1692-1702. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6031. eCollection 2020 Feb.
(eastern larch, tamarack) is a transcontinental North American conifer with a prominent disjunction in the Yukon isolating the Alaskan distribution from the rest of its range. We investigate whether in situ persistence during the last glacial maximum (LGM) or long-distance postglacial migration from south of the ice sheets resulted in the modern-day Alaskan distribution. We analyzed variation in three chloroplast DNA regions of 840 trees from a total of 69 populations (24 new sampling sites situated on both sides of the Yukon range disjunction pooled with 45 populations from a published source) and conducted ensemble species distribution modeling (SDM) throughout Canada and United States to hindcast the potential range of during the LGM. We uncovered the genetic signature of a long-term isolation of larch populations in Alaska, identifying three endemic chlorotypes and low levels of genetic diversity. Range-wide analysis across North America revealed the presence of a distinct Alaskan lineage. Postglacial gene flow across the Yukon divide was unidirectional, from Alaska toward previously glaciated Canadian regions, and with no evidence of immigration into Alaska. Hindcast SDM indicates one of the broadest areas of past climate suitability for existed in central Alaska, suggesting possible in situ persistence of larch in Alaska during the LGM. Our results provide the first unambiguous evidence for the long-term isolation of in Alaska that extends beyond the last glacial period and into the present interglacial period. The lack of gene flow into Alaska along with the overall probability of larch occurrence in Alaska being currently lower than during the LGM suggests that modern-day Alaskan larch populations are isolated climate relicts of broader glacial distributions, and so are particularly vulnerable to current warming trends.
(东部落叶松,美洲落叶松)是一种横贯北美大陆的针叶树,在育空地区有一个显著的间断分布,将阿拉斯加的分布区域与该物种分布范围的其他地区隔离开来。我们研究了在末次盛冰期(LGM)期间原地留存,还是从冰盖以南进行长距离冰后期迁移导致了现今阿拉斯加的分布格局。我们分析了来自总共69个种群的840棵树的三个叶绿体DNA区域的变异情况(育空山脉间断分布两侧的24个新采样点与已发表资料中的45个种群合并),并在加拿大和美国全境进行了集合物种分布建模(SDM),以推测LGM期间落叶松的潜在分布范围。我们发现了阿拉斯加落叶松种群长期隔离的遗传特征,识别出三种地方叶绿体单倍型以及低水平的遗传多样性。对北美范围的分析揭示了一个独特的阿拉斯加谱系的存在。冰后期跨越育空分水岭的基因流是单向的,从阿拉斯加流向先前被冰川覆盖的加拿大地区,没有证据表明有基因迁入阿拉斯加。推测性的SDM表明,过去气候最适宜落叶松生长的最广泛区域之一存在于阿拉斯加中部,这表明在LGM期间阿拉斯加的落叶松可能原地留存。我们的结果首次明确证明了阿拉斯加落叶松的长期隔离,这种隔离不仅延伸到了上一个冰期,还持续到了当前的间冰期。缺乏基因流入阿拉斯加,以及目前阿拉斯加落叶松出现的总体概率低于LGM期间,这表明现今阿拉斯加的落叶松种群是更广泛冰川分布的孤立气候残遗种 , 因此特别容易受到当前变暖趋势的影响。