Abstract

Biogeographic patterns of globally widespread species are expected to reflect regional structure, as well as connectivity caused by occasional long-distance dispersal. We assessed the level and drivers of population structure, connectivity, and timescales of population isolation in one of the most widespread and ruderal plants in the world — the common moss Ceratodon purpureus. We applied phylogenetic, population genetic, and molecular dating analyses to a global (n = 147) sampling data set, using three chloroplast loci and one nuclear locus. The plastid data revealed several distinct and geographically structured lineages, with connectivity patterns associated with worldwide, latitudinal “bands.” These imply that connectivity is strongly influenced by global atmospheric circulation patterns, with dispersal and establishment beyond these latitudinal bands less common. Biogeographic patterns were less clear within the nuclear marker, with gene duplication likely hindering the detection of these. Divergence time analyses indicated that the current matrilineal population structure in C. purpureus has developed over the past six million years, with lineages diverging during the late Miocene, Pliocene, and Quaternary. Several colonization events in the Antarctic were apparent, as well as one old and distinct Antarctic clade, possibly isolated on the continent since the Pliocene. As C. purpureus is considered a model organism, the matrilineal biogeographic structure identified here provides a useful framework for future genetic and developmental studies on bryophytes. Our general findings may also be relevant to understanding global environmental influences on the biogeography of other organisms with microscopic propagules (e.g., spores) dispersed by wind.

Highlights

  • Bryophytes tend to show extensive distributions, often spanning multiple continents and/or both hemispheres (Schofield and Crum, 1972)

  • We did not investigate the occurrence of Internal Transcribed Spacer (ITS) copies further as ITS amplification of other contaminants e.g. fungi, is common in herbarium samples, and this approach would be better pursued through future studies with fresh rather than degraded herbarium material

  • The analysis of the chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) loci within C. purpureus revealed well-supported, several hundreds of thousands to multi-millionyear old lineages derived from distinct global regions (Figures 2 and 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Bryophytes tend to show extensive distributions, often spanning multiple continents and/or both hemispheres (Schofield and Crum, 1972). The often extremely prolific spore production (Longton, 1997) combined with small spore size (generally ~10–20 mm diameter in mosses; Frahm, 2007) give many bryophytes strong potential for long distance dispersal. The extent to which the global distribution of cosmopolitan bryophytes predominantly reflects recent or ongoing long-distance dispersal events (e.g. over thousands of years), or a worldwide spread acquired over much longer timescales (e.g. millions of years), is poorly known

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