Abstract

The Oligocene and Miocene are key periods in the formation of the modern topography and flora of East Asian and Indo-China. However, it is unclear how geological and climatic factors contributed to the high endemism and species richness of this region. The Quercus franchetii complex is widespread in the southeast Himalaya fringe and northern Indo-China with a long evolutionary history. It provides a unique proxy for studying the diversity pattern of evergreen woody lineages in this region since the Oligocene. In this study, we combined chloroplast (cpDNA) sequences, nuclear microsatellite loci (nSSRs), and species distribution modeling (SDM) to investigate the impacts of geological events on genetic diversity of the Q. franchetii complex. The results showed that the initial cpDNA haplotype divergence was estimated to occur during the middle Oligocene (30.7 Ma), which might have been raised by the tectonic activity at this episode to the Miocene. The nSSR results revealed two major groups of populations, the central Yunnan-Guizhou plateau (YGP) group and the peripheral distribution group when K = 2, in responding to the rapid YGP uplift during the late Miocene, which restricted gene flow between the populations in core and marginal areas. SDM analysis indicated that the distribution ranges of the Q. franchetii complex expanded northwards after the last glacial maximum, but the core distribution range in YGP was stable. Our results showed that the divergence of Q. franchetii complex is rooted in the mid-Oligocene. The early geological events during the Oligocene, and the late Miocene may play key roles to restrict seed-mediated gene flow among regions, but the pollen-mediated gene flow was less impacted. The uplifts of the YGP and the climate since LGM subsequently boosted the divergence of the populations in core and marginal areas.

Highlights

  • The late Paleogene (36∼23.3 Ma) is a key period in the formation of the modern topography and flora of Asia (Akhmetiev and Zaporozhets, 2014; Li et al, 2019)

  • The genetic diversity map showed that the Nanpan River region (NPR) and Hengduan Mountains (HDM) populations had high genetic diversity (Figure 3C)

  • Our study revealed a high genetic diversity estimate for the Q. franchetii complex (HT, 0.982; Allelic richness (Ar), 3.18–4.34), which is similar to the genetic diversity of other evergreen oaks in southwestern

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Summary

Introduction

The late Paleogene (36∼23.3 Ma) is a key period in the formation of the modern topography and flora of Asia (Akhmetiev and Zaporozhets, 2014; Li et al, 2019). During this period, an abrupt climate cooling at the Eocene-Oligocene (E-O) boundary (33.9 Ma) led to the turnover in regional biota and their distribution ranges. All these climatic and geological events had profound impacts on the distribution and divergence of the regional biota. Little is known about how the timing and mechanisms of these ancient geological and climatic events that contributed to the high species diversity and high level of endemism in the southeast Himalayan fringe region

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