Abstract

AbstractAimSpecies with widespread distributions offer excellent opportunities for investigating recent biogeographical patterns across broad scales. Here, we tested the hypothesis that, due to its intermediate geographical location, NW Africa is pivotal in explaining the phylogeographical patterns of taxa with Mediterranean–Macaronesian distributions using a legume species with short generation times.LocationMediterranean, with a focus on NW Africa and the Canary Islands.TaxonPitch trefoil (Bituminaria bituminosa).MethodsWe generated genetic data and performed phylogeographical and demographic analyses at two geographical scales: Mediterranean Basin (MB), using plastid sequences (115 individuals), and Macaronesia, using plastid sequences (182 individuals) and 10 nuclear microsatellite loci (220 individuals). We also performed a literature survey focusing on phylogeographical studies of other circum‐Mediterranean taxa.ResultsNorthwest Africa was identified as a centre of genetic diversity (19 out of 38 haplotypes) and demographic expansion of B. bituminosa in the MB during the Pleistocene. Our literature review revealed two main phylogeographical patterns in widespread species: pre‐Mediterranean evergreen sclerophylls versus Pleistocene facultative‐deciduous (including Bituminaria) taxa, but on average, both functional groups show a similar, large genetic diversity (~40% of haplotypes) in NW Africa. At the Macaronesian scale, we found that Canarian Bituminaria is composed of two genetic sublineages that coexist and hybridize on the central islands and in the mainland Macaronesian enclave (Anti‐Atlas region). Demographic analyses rejected the progression rule as the model of island colonization but strongly suggested that Anti‐Atlas populations are the result of back‐colonization from the easternmost islands before the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM).ConclusionsBituminaria displays a pattern of Quaternary eastward expansion in the MB that appears to be paralleled by several members of its functional plant group. Thus, our study reveals a previously undescribed dual role of NW Africa in plant biogeography, acting both as a source of species expansion to the rest of the MB and a LGM refugium of plant populations with a Macaronesian island origin.

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