Abstract

Climatic oscillations of the Quaternary rapidly compelled plant species to shift their geographical range. How alpine plant species responded to climate change, however, remains elusive and remnants of the cold-adapted flora that currently strive in restricted ranges as small, isolated populations have been particularly overlooked. To address the evolutionary history of such a ‘glacial relict’, we here sampled and genotyped all known native populations of a narrow endemic species from the northwestern Alps, Papaver occidentale, as well as closely related taxa with double digest restriction-site Associated DNA (ddRAD) sequencing. Spatial patterns of genetic variation across populations coupled with insights from climatic niche modelling through time address underpinings of the long-term persistence of the species in face of climate changes. Evidence from population genetics and ecological modelling indicates that P. occidentale likely persisted through the last glacial maximum outside of the Western Prealps and that a major lineage recolonized the area from lower elevation, external regions. Differentiated lineages at the Northern margins of the species distribution range highlight highly divergent and geographically restricted populations that include considerable share of private markers and may indicate local glacial survival in isolated conditions. Our data thus imply that processes having shaped intraspecific spatial genetic structure within the Alps can be complex and lead to mosaic of populations with a mixed-history of local survival and immigration. A better understanding of spatio-temporal aspects of range contraction–expansion is crucial to shed light on processes underlying the evolution of remnant populations of such endemic species and set conservation priorities considering current climate changes.

Highlights

  • Climatic oscillations of the Quaternary rapidly compelled species to shift their geographical range (Hewitt 2004), especially in the alpine regions that were heavily glaciated during cold periods such as the last glacial maximum (LGM) some 22,000 years ago (Schonswetter et al 2005)

  • The present study aims at describing the distribution of genetic variation among extant populations of the endemic P. occidentale to understand how such a taxon persisted in face of past climate changes

  • Individuals genotyped with double digest restriction-site Associated DNA (ddRAD) sequencing congruently clustered into coherent groups using distance-based or model-based inferences in structure, and highlighted P. occidentale as consistently differentiated from other white-flowered taxa of the P. alpinum complex included in this analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Climatic oscillations of the Quaternary rapidly compelled species to shift their geographical range (Hewitt 2004), especially in the alpine regions that were heavily glaciated during cold periods such as the last glacial maximum (LGM) some 22,000 years ago (Schonswetter et al 2005). Extended author information available on the last page of the article remains poorly understood and the European Alps offer an adequately heterogeneous model landscape to address the impact of range expansion–contraction on the evolution of alpine plants (Ozenda 2009). How arctic-alpine plants shifted their distribution ranges in between cold-phases of the LGM and current times is largely unknown, as remain consequences for their diversification (Kadereit 2017; Schönswetter and Schneeweiss 2019)

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