Abstract
In Central Europe, salt-influenced habitats are restricted mainly to the coastlines of the North Sea and the Baltic Sea. The few natural inland salt sites suffer from size reduction and loss in biodiversity, while anthropogenic salt sites around potash mining dumps experienced recent and massive de novo colonization by numerous halophytes. Our study aimed to elucidate the general patterns of gene flow among coastal and inland salt habitats. We used amplified fragment length polymorphisms to assess the genetic diversity and genetic structure of 18 European populations of the halophyte Spergularia media (Caryophyllaceae), sampled from inland and coastal salt sites of Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark, Austria, France and Italy. Estimates of genetic diversity on the population level were generally low, especially within inland salt habitats. Analyses of molecular variance showed comparatively strong differentiation among populations. Multivariate ordination (principal coordinate analysis) and a NeighborNet analysis revealed four distinct groups of populations that showed good correspondence to their geographic origins. A Bayesian analysis performed with the program Structure as well as high pairwise Φ ST values supported the results of the phenetic analyses. The observed patterns of diversity and differentiation among inland populations of S. media are best explained by the isolated nature of suitable salt habitats, with concomitant reduction of gene flow to and among these sites. Our data support the hypothesis that the colonization of anthropogenic salt sites by S. media originated from natural inland habitats.
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