Abstract

Background Pinus massoniana, an ecologically and economically important conifer, is widespread across central and southern mainland China and Taiwan. In this study, we tested the central–marginal paradigm that predicts that the marginal populations tend to be less polymorphic than the central ones in their genetic composition, and examined a founders' effect in the island population.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe examined the phylogeography and population structuring of the P. massoniana based on nucleotide sequences of cpDNA atpB-rbcL intergenic spacer, intron regions of the AdhC2 locus, and microsatellite fingerprints. SAMOVA analysis of nucleotide sequences indicated that most genetic variants resided among geographical regions. High levels of genetic diversity in the marginal populations in the south region, a pattern seemingly contradicting the central–marginal paradigm, and the fixation of private haplotypes in most populations indicate that multiple refugia may have existed over the glacial maxima. STRUCTURE analyses on microsatellites revealed that genetic structure of mainland populations was mediated with recent genetic exchanges mostly via pollen flow, and that the genetic composition in east region was intermixed between south and west regions, a pattern likely shaped by gene introgression and maintenance of ancestral polymorphisms. As expected, the small island population in Taiwan was genetically differentiated from mainland populations.Conclusions/SignificanceThe marginal populations in south region possessed divergent gene pools, suggesting that the past glaciations might have low impacts on these populations at low latitudes. Estimates of ancestral population sizes interestingly reflect a recent expansion in mainland from a rather smaller population, a pattern that seemingly agrees with the pollen record.

Highlights

  • Climate changes over the past two million years are often interpreted as the primary driver of range fragmentation and the speciation of animals and plants in the northern hemisphere [1]

  • A central–marginal paradigm predicts that populations around the distributional center tend to possess higher levels of genetic variation than the peripheral ones because genetic variations would be lost through stochastic drift faster in marginal populations than in the central ones [5]

  • We examined the genetic variation and structure across the natural populations of P. massoniana based on sequence variation in the atpB-rbcL intergenic spacer of cpDNA, the introns 4 to 8 of AdhC2 gene of nuclear DNA, and 11 microsatellite loci

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Summary

Introduction

Climate changes over the past two million years are often interpreted as the primary driver of range fragmentation and the speciation of animals and plants in the northern hemisphere [1]. The number of genetically distinct, ancestral lineages, their locations during the glacial maxima, and the postglacial migration routes for tree and plant species could be inferred [3,4]. Once an island with small geographical size is colonized, population differentiation between islands, as well as between island and neighboring mainland, would be facilitated by founders’ effects and local extinction-recolonization [6]. Compared to ancestral populations on the mainland, one would expect island populations maintains lower genetic variability as the result of smaller population sizes and numbers due to habitat limitation on islands as well as genetic bottlenecks associated with colonization. We tested the central–marginal paradigm that predicts that the marginal populations tend to be less polymorphic than the central ones in their genetic composition, and examined a founders’ effect in the island population

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Results
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