Abstract

Acacia s.l. farnesiana, which originates from Mesoamerica, is the most widely distributed Acacia s.l. species across the tropics. It is assumed that the plant was transferred across the Atlantic to southern Europe by Spanish explorers, and then spread across the Old World tropics through a combination of chance long-distance and human-mediated dispersal. Our study uses genetic analysis and information from historical sources to test the relative roles of chance and human-mediated dispersal in its distribution. The results confirm the Mesoamerican origins of the plant and show three patterns of human-mediated dispersal. Samples from Spain showed greater genetic diversity than those from other Old World tropics, suggesting more instances of transatlantic introductions from the Americas to that country than to other parts of Africa and Asia. Individuals from the Philippines matched a population from South Central Mexico and were likely to have been direct, trans-Pacific introductions. Australian samples were genetically unique, indicating that the arrival of the species in the continent was independent of these European colonial activities. This suggests the possibility of pre-European human-mediated dispersal across the Pacific Ocean. These significant findings raise new questions for biogeographic studies that assume chance or transoceanic dispersal for disjunct plant distributions.

Highlights

  • Acacia s.l. is a pan-tropical genus with around 1450 species distributed across Africa, Asia, the Americas and Australia [1]

  • Our study is significant in providing the first genetic analysis of a plant introduction into continental Australia within a historical time frame of probably more than 750 years

  • It demonstrates the remarkable possibility of human-mediated dispersal of A. farnesiana from the Americas across the Pacific Ocean well before the arrival of Europeans to Australia

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Summary

Introduction

Acacia s.l. is a pan-tropical genus with around 1450 species distributed across Africa, Asia, the Americas and Australia [1] Some of these acacia species are hypothesized to have been transported between continents through long-distance oceanic dispersal [2,3], but in most cases, humans have been the main agents of plant movement in Acacia This study investigates the relative roles of chance long-distance and human-mediated dispersal in the pan-tropical distribution of Acacia s.l. farnesiana (L.) Willd. It is identified as the most widely distributed of all Acacia s.l. species in the world [7], and is found in the Americas, the Caribbean, southern Europe, Africa, islands in the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans, West, South and Southeast Asia, and Australia [6,8]. The new nomenclature of Acacia classifies A. farnesiana in the genus Vachellia, in this study we use the name Acacia farnesiana to maintain consistency with historical references that compared it with the original type species known from Egypt (Acacia nilotica)

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