Incipient speciation, high genetic diversity, and ecological divergence in the alligator bark juniper suggest complex demographic changes during the Pleistocene

The most recent glacial cycles of the Pleistocene affected the distribution, population sizes, and levels of genetic structure of temperate-forest species in the main Mexican mountain systems. Our objective was to investigate the effects these cycles had on the genetic structure and distribution of a dominant species of the “mexical” vegetation across North and Central America. We studied the genetic diversity of Juniperus deppeana, a conifer distributed from the Southwestern United States to the highlands of Central America. We combined information of one plastid marker and two nuclear markers to infer phylogeographic structure, genetic diversity and demographic changes. We also characterized the climatic niche for each variety to infer the plausible area of suitability during past climatic conditions and to evaluate climatic niche discontinuities along with the species distribution. We found a marked phylogeographic structure separating the populations North and South of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, with populations to the South of this barrier forming a distinct genetic cluster corresponding to Juniperus deppeana var. gamboana. We also found signals of population expansion in the Northern genetic cluster. Ecological niche modeling results confirmed climatic niche differences and discontinuities among J. deppeana varieties and heterogeneous responses to climatic oscillations. Overall, J. deppeana’s genetic diversity has been marked by distribution shifts, population growth and secondary contact the North, and in situ permanence in the South since the last interglacial to the present. High genetic variation suggests a wide and climatically diverse distribution during climatic oscillations. We detected the existence of two main genetic clusters, supporting previous proposals that Juniperus deppeana and Juniperus gamboana may be considered two separate species.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Martínez de León, Rodrigo autor, Castellanos Morales, Gabriela Doctora autora 14360, Moreno Letelier, Alejandra autora
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Juniperus deppeana, Bosques de coníferas, Variación genética, Genética de población, Filogeografía, Nicho (Ecología), Crecimiento demográfico, Cambio climático, Artfrosur,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.13802
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:62764
record_format koha
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Juniperus deppeana
Bosques de coníferas
Variación genética
Genética de población
Filogeografía
Nicho (Ecología)
Crecimiento demográfico
Cambio climático
Artfrosur
Juniperus deppeana
Bosques de coníferas
Variación genética
Genética de población
Filogeografía
Nicho (Ecología)
Crecimiento demográfico
Cambio climático
Artfrosur
spellingShingle Juniperus deppeana
Bosques de coníferas
Variación genética
Genética de población
Filogeografía
Nicho (Ecología)
Crecimiento demográfico
Cambio climático
Artfrosur
Juniperus deppeana
Bosques de coníferas
Variación genética
Genética de población
Filogeografía
Nicho (Ecología)
Crecimiento demográfico
Cambio climático
Artfrosur
Martínez de León, Rodrigo autor
Castellanos Morales, Gabriela Doctora autora 14360
Moreno Letelier, Alejandra autora
Incipient speciation, high genetic diversity, and ecological divergence in the alligator bark juniper suggest complex demographic changes during the Pleistocene
description The most recent glacial cycles of the Pleistocene affected the distribution, population sizes, and levels of genetic structure of temperate-forest species in the main Mexican mountain systems. Our objective was to investigate the effects these cycles had on the genetic structure and distribution of a dominant species of the “mexical” vegetation across North and Central America. We studied the genetic diversity of Juniperus deppeana, a conifer distributed from the Southwestern United States to the highlands of Central America. We combined information of one plastid marker and two nuclear markers to infer phylogeographic structure, genetic diversity and demographic changes. We also characterized the climatic niche for each variety to infer the plausible area of suitability during past climatic conditions and to evaluate climatic niche discontinuities along with the species distribution. We found a marked phylogeographic structure separating the populations North and South of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, with populations to the South of this barrier forming a distinct genetic cluster corresponding to Juniperus deppeana var. gamboana. We also found signals of population expansion in the Northern genetic cluster. Ecological niche modeling results confirmed climatic niche differences and discontinuities among J. deppeana varieties and heterogeneous responses to climatic oscillations. Overall, J. deppeana’s genetic diversity has been marked by distribution shifts, population growth and secondary contact the North, and in situ permanence in the South since the last interglacial to the present. High genetic variation suggests a wide and climatically diverse distribution during climatic oscillations. We detected the existence of two main genetic clusters, supporting previous proposals that Juniperus deppeana and Juniperus gamboana may be considered two separate species.
format Texto
topic_facet Juniperus deppeana
Bosques de coníferas
Variación genética
Genética de población
Filogeografía
Nicho (Ecología)
Crecimiento demográfico
Cambio climático
Artfrosur
author Martínez de León, Rodrigo autor
Castellanos Morales, Gabriela Doctora autora 14360
Moreno Letelier, Alejandra autora
author_facet Martínez de León, Rodrigo autor
Castellanos Morales, Gabriela Doctora autora 14360
Moreno Letelier, Alejandra autora
author_sort Martínez de León, Rodrigo autor
title Incipient speciation, high genetic diversity, and ecological divergence in the alligator bark juniper suggest complex demographic changes during the Pleistocene
title_short Incipient speciation, high genetic diversity, and ecological divergence in the alligator bark juniper suggest complex demographic changes during the Pleistocene
title_full Incipient speciation, high genetic diversity, and ecological divergence in the alligator bark juniper suggest complex demographic changes during the Pleistocene
title_fullStr Incipient speciation, high genetic diversity, and ecological divergence in the alligator bark juniper suggest complex demographic changes during the Pleistocene
title_full_unstemmed Incipient speciation, high genetic diversity, and ecological divergence in the alligator bark juniper suggest complex demographic changes during the Pleistocene
title_sort incipient speciation, high genetic diversity, and ecological divergence in the alligator bark juniper suggest complex demographic changes during the pleistocene
url https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.13802
work_keys_str_mv AT martinezdeleonrodrigoautor incipientspeciationhighgeneticdiversityandecologicaldivergenceinthealligatorbarkjunipersuggestcomplexdemographicchangesduringthepleistocene
AT castellanosmoralesgabrieladoctoraautora14360 incipientspeciationhighgeneticdiversityandecologicaldivergenceinthealligatorbarkjunipersuggestcomplexdemographicchangesduringthepleistocene
AT morenoletelieralejandraautora incipientspeciationhighgeneticdiversityandecologicaldivergenceinthealligatorbarkjunipersuggestcomplexdemographicchangesduringthepleistocene
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:627642024-08-07T11:27:30ZIncipient speciation, high genetic diversity, and ecological divergence in the alligator bark juniper suggest complex demographic changes during the Pleistocene Martínez de León, Rodrigo autor Castellanos Morales, Gabriela Doctora autora 14360 Moreno Letelier, Alejandra autora textengThe most recent glacial cycles of the Pleistocene affected the distribution, population sizes, and levels of genetic structure of temperate-forest species in the main Mexican mountain systems. Our objective was to investigate the effects these cycles had on the genetic structure and distribution of a dominant species of the “mexical” vegetation across North and Central America. We studied the genetic diversity of Juniperus deppeana, a conifer distributed from the Southwestern United States to the highlands of Central America. We combined information of one plastid marker and two nuclear markers to infer phylogeographic structure, genetic diversity and demographic changes. We also characterized the climatic niche for each variety to infer the plausible area of suitability during past climatic conditions and to evaluate climatic niche discontinuities along with the species distribution. We found a marked phylogeographic structure separating the populations North and South of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, with populations to the South of this barrier forming a distinct genetic cluster corresponding to Juniperus deppeana var. gamboana. We also found signals of population expansion in the Northern genetic cluster. Ecological niche modeling results confirmed climatic niche differences and discontinuities among J. deppeana varieties and heterogeneous responses to climatic oscillations. Overall, J. deppeana’s genetic diversity has been marked by distribution shifts, population growth and secondary contact the North, and in situ permanence in the South since the last interglacial to the present. High genetic variation suggests a wide and climatically diverse distribution during climatic oscillations. We detected the existence of two main genetic clusters, supporting previous proposals that Juniperus deppeana and Juniperus gamboana may be considered two separate species.The most recent glacial cycles of the Pleistocene affected the distribution, population sizes, and levels of genetic structure of temperate-forest species in the main Mexican mountain systems. Our objective was to investigate the effects these cycles had on the genetic structure and distribution of a dominant species of the “mexical” vegetation across North and Central America. We studied the genetic diversity of Juniperus deppeana, a conifer distributed from the Southwestern United States to the highlands of Central America. We combined information of one plastid marker and two nuclear markers to infer phylogeographic structure, genetic diversity and demographic changes. We also characterized the climatic niche for each variety to infer the plausible area of suitability during past climatic conditions and to evaluate climatic niche discontinuities along with the species distribution. We found a marked phylogeographic structure separating the populations North and South of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, with populations to the South of this barrier forming a distinct genetic cluster corresponding to Juniperus deppeana var. gamboana. We also found signals of population expansion in the Northern genetic cluster. Ecological niche modeling results confirmed climatic niche differences and discontinuities among J. deppeana varieties and heterogeneous responses to climatic oscillations. Overall, J. deppeana’s genetic diversity has been marked by distribution shifts, population growth and secondary contact the North, and in situ permanence in the South since the last interglacial to the present. High genetic variation suggests a wide and climatically diverse distribution during climatic oscillations. We detected the existence of two main genetic clusters, supporting previous proposals that Juniperus deppeana and Juniperus gamboana may be considered two separate species.Juniperus deppeanaBosques de coníferasVariación genéticaGenética de poblaciónFilogeografíaNicho (Ecología)Crecimiento demográficoCambio climáticoArtfrosurPeerJhttps://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.13802Acceso en línea sin restricciones