Abstract

Range-wide population studies of wide spread species are often associated with complex diversity patterns resulting from genetically divergent evolutionary significant units (ESUs). The compound evolutionary history creating such a pattern of diversity can be inferred through molecular analyses. Asparagus cochinchinensis, a medicinally important perennial herb, is in decline due to overharvesting in Korea. Eight A. cochinchinensis populations in Korea and three populations from neighboring countries (China, Japan and Taiwan) were examined using nine nuclear microsatellite loci and three chloroplast microsatellite loci to characterize molecular diversity patterns. The average within-population diversity was limited likely due to long-term bottlenecks observed in all eight populations. High pairwise FST values indicated that the populations have largely diverged, but the divergences were not correlated with geographic distances. Clustering analyses revealed a highly complex spatial structure pattern associated with two ESUs. Approximate Bayesian Computation (ABC) suggests that the two ESUs split about 21,000 BP were independently introduced to Korea approximately 1,800 years ago, and admixed in secondary contact zones. The two ESUs found in our study may have different habitat preferences and growth conditions, implying that the two genetically divergent groups should be considered not only for conservation and management but also for breeding programs in agricultural areas.

Highlights

  • Population-level genetic studies for species across wide ranges often reveal that the species consist of multiple Evolutionary Significant Units (ESUs) or even harbor a cryptic species[1]

  • Because some genetic analyses such as STRUCTURE and DIYABC depend on strong assumptions of marker independence and Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium (HWE), we purged four markers (AC008, AC014, AC017, and AC069) that violated the assumptions from all downstream analyses

  • Our assignment analyses and the Approximate Bayesian Computation (ABC) model of choice suggest that there are two distinct evolutionary significant units (ESUs) (GND, China & TPE, Taiwan) which diverged around LGM and that later each ESU migrated to neighboring regions

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Summary

Introduction

Population-level genetic studies for species across wide ranges often reveal that the species consist of multiple Evolutionary Significant Units (ESUs) or even harbor a cryptic species[1]. Allopatric divergence might have further led to establishment of ESUs or cryptic species from a range of glacial refugia[4,5] Populations that experience such dramatic evolutionary events often exhibit complex patterns of genetic diversity. Is a perennial herb that is widely distributed from temperate (China, Korea, Japan) to tropical Asia (Laos and Vietnam)[13]. This species is one of the closest relatives to the commercially important crop, garden asparagus. Coupled with the traditional population genetics approach, ABC method provides more sophisticated reconstructions of the evolutionary history for a target species

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