Abstract

Drylands count among the most globally extensive biomes, and while many desert and dry rangeland ecosystems are under threat, genetic structures of dryland species are still rarely studied. Artemisia frigida is one of the most widely distributed plant species in the temperate rangelands of Eurasia and North America, and it also dominates in many habitats of Mongolia due to its tolerance to low temperatures, drought and disturbance. Local environmental conditions and grazing pressure can influence species performance and affect spatial patterns of genetic diversity in contrasting ways, and our study set out to evaluate such effects on the genetic diversity and structure of A. frigida. We first developed new species-specific Simple Sequence Repeats (SSRs) markers using whole genome sequencing. We then analysed 11 populations of A. frigida that had been sampled along a large climatic gradient in Mongolia, which were sub-structured according to three levels of grazing intensity. Estimates of genetic diversity at the population level were high (HO = 0.56, HE = 0.73) and tended to increase with higher precipitation and soil nutrient availability. Grazing had no effect on genetic diversity, however, a high number of grazing-specific indicator alleles was found at grazed sites. Genetic differentiation among populations was extremely low (global GST = 0.034). Analysis of Molecular Variance revealed 5% variance between populations along the climatic gradient, with 3% of the variance being partitioned among different grazing intensity levels. We found no relationship between geographic and genetic distances, and thus no isolation by distance in this widely distributed species. The relatively low genetic structuring suggests that considerable gene flow exists among A. frigida populations across the rangelands of Mongolia, in spite of the pervasive grazing in the region.

Highlights

  • The study of genetic changes in natural populations in response to environmental conditions, land use and their respective interactions has become a major research topic (Grant and Grant 2002; Sork 2018)

  • Our results reveal that higher amounts of summer precipitation and soil phosphorous promote genetic diversity in A. frigida (Table 5), suggesting that environmental conditions have a substantial impact on genetic diversity

  • Our results on A. frigida revealed that genetic diversity of this cold, drought- and disturbance-adapted species in Mongolia was relatively high and genetic differentiation low among eleven populations across a north to south gradient

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Summary

Introduction

The study of genetic changes in natural populations in response to environmental conditions, land use and their respective interactions has become a major research topic (Grant and Grant 2002; Sork 2018). The extent of gene flow between populations might depend on geographic distance and on isolation patterns defined by environmental conditions (Sexton et al 2014). Climatic conditions can have a strong influence on natural selection among populations In addition to such interactions with the local environment, human land use practices such as livestock grazing can have direct and compounding effects on a population’s genetic structure as well as its genetic diversity. There is a definitive lack of studies on population genetics among dryland species (Greenville et al 2017)

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