Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dspace.ncfu.ru/handle/20.500.12258/3714
Title: Patterns of plastid DNA differentiation in Erythronium (Liliaceae) are consistent with allopatric lineage divergence in Europe across longitude and latitude
Authors: Ivanov, A. L.
Иванов, А. Л.
Keywords: Carpathian Basin;Cryptic northern refugia;Long distance dispersal;Oceanic-continental gradient;Phylogeography;Temperate species
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: Springer-Verlag Wien
Citation: Bartha, L., Sramkó, G., Volkova, P.A., Surina, B., Ivanov, A.L., Banciu, H.L. Patterns of plastid DNA differentiation in Erythronium (Liliaceae) are consistent with allopatric lineage divergence in Europe across longitude and latitude // Plant Systematics and Evolution. - 2015. - Volume 301. - Issue 6. - Pages 1747-1758
Series/Report no.: Plant Systematics and Evolution
Abstract: Little attention has been paid so far to the genetic legacy of the oceanic-continental gradient across Europe. Due to this gradient, steppe regions become more extensive and mesic environments become more scattered towards the East. A well-suited system to study the impact of this gradient on lineage differentiation is the temperate mesophilic plant Erythronium dens-canis (Liliaceae), which is widespread in southern Europe with a distribution gap in the Pannonian Plain. Moreover, the large disjunction between E. dens-canis and its sister species E. caucasicum coincides with the Pontic steppe region. By applying range-wide sampling of E. dens-canis and limited sampling of E. caucasicum, we explored their phylogeography using the plastid regions rpl32-trnL and rps15-ycf1. Three major phylogroups were identified: a Caucasian lineage, a highly structured and narrowly distributed Transylvanian lineage, and a more homogenous and widely distributed ‘non-Transylvanian’ lineage. Apparently, both physiographic (mountain) and climatic (steppe) barriers have caused allopatric differentiation in European Erythronium. The Southern Carpathians constitute a latitudinal barrier and the Pannonian Plain a longitudinal barrier between the Transylvanian and ‘non-Transylvanian’ lineages of E. dens-canis. The eastern Carpathian Basin likely functioned as a combination of cryptic eastern (mesic) and cryptic northern refugia for E. dens-canis during glacial periods. The Eastern Carpathians and particularly the Pontic steppe regions acted as a longitudinal barrier between E. dens-canis and E. caucasicum. Steppe-dominated gaps in the distribution range of Erythronium are mirrored by genetic discontinuities along longitudes; this highlights the important role of the oceanic-continental gradient throughout Europe for lineage differentiation
URI: https://www.scopus.com/record/display.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84938205857&origin=resultslist&sort=plf-f&src=s&nlo=1&nlr=20&nls=afprfnm-t&affilName=north+caucasus+federal+university&sid=fe656e0c7517dbc25228b3d577bd000c&sot=afnl&sdt=cl&cluster=scopubyr%2c%222015%22%2ct&sl=53&s=%28AF-ID%28%22North+Caucasus+Federal+University%22+60070541%29%29&relpos=27&citeCnt=7&searchTerm=
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12258/3714
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