A phylogeographic study of four tree species (Padus grayana, Euonymus oxyphyllus, Magnolia hypoleuca, and Carpinus laxiflora) growing in Japanese deciduous broad-leaved forests was conducted based on chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) variations. Using nucleotide sequences of 702-1,059 bp of intergenic spacers of cpDNA, 20, 27, eight, and eight haplotypes were detected among 251, 251, 226, and 262 individuals sampled from 67, 79, 75, and 71 populations of the above species, respectively. The geographical pattern of the cpDNA variations was highly structured in each species, and the following three regional populations were genetically highly differentiated among all four species: (1) the Sea of Japan-side area, (2) the Kanto region, and (3) southwestern Japan. Based on some interspecific similarities among the phylogeographic patterns, the following migration scenario of Japanese deciduous broad-leaved forests was postulated. During the last glacial maximum (LGM), the forests were separately distributed in six regions. After LGM, as the climate warmed, the forests in eastern Japan separately expanded from each of the refugia along the Sea of Japan-side or along the Pacific Ocean-side. In contrast, those in southwestern Japan retreated and moved to high altitudes from each of the continuous forests.
We investigated the genetic structure of Sciadopitys verticillata, an endemic conifer in Japan, using 11 microsatellite markers. Average expected heterozygosity varied from 0.282 to 0.450, with between 2 and 17 alleles per locus, and allelic richness varied from 2.14 to 2.94 within a population. Wilcoxon signed-rank tests suggested that there was a recent bottleneck in the southwestern populations in the Kinki district and in isolated northeastern populations in the Tohoku district. Bayesian clustering analysis showed that the populations of the Chubu, Kinki, and Shikoku districts were admixed from several clusters. Archaeological data suggest past anthropogenic exploitation for building and coffin material.
Podostemaceae are aquatic herbs and are famous for their anomalous vegetative morphology, occurring only in rapids. Because of its peculiar morphology, there were no established theory nor accepted opinion on the phylogenetic position. Especially, Cusset and Cusset (1988) proposed the new class, Podostemopsida beside the Magnollopsida and Liliopsida. We, therefore, consequences extensive and detailled analyses using nucleotide sequences ofrbcL genes for two genera and three species of the family together with many representatives of the families of flowering plants to determine the closest ally. The conclusion was that the Crassulaceae is a sister group to the Podostemaceae.
Contact zones are defined as areas where populations from different refugia meet during a postglacial expansion and distinct DNA lineages are mixedly distributed. In Japan, contact zones of various plants and animals were reported from the Kinki-Chugoku region. These contact zones appear to be maintained without any drastic topographic barriers such as those observed in the Alps and Pyrenees Mountains. In this study, the mechanisms underlying the formation and/or maintenance of these contact zones were investigated using six deciduous broad-leaved tree species (Carpinus laxiflora, C. tschonoskii, C. japonica, Magnolia obovata, Padus grayana, and Euonymus oxyphyllus). First, the precise location of the contact zones was examined by intensive genetic analysis of the six species. Second, the relationships between the geographic location of the contact zone and various environmental factors, including climate and topography, were investigated by generalized additive models to reveal the mechanisms of the formation and maintenance of the contact zones. As a result, four of the six examined plant species clearly showed a geographically common contact zone in Hyogo Prefecture and its adjacent areas. The results of the generalized additive models indicate that the pattern of low habitat suitability estimated by ecological niche modeling was the most important factor for determining the location of the common contact zone. These results suggest that areas with low habitat suitability in Hyogo Prefecture restrict the migration and gene flow of the four species in this region, and thus, they maintain the pattern of the contact zones. This study suggests that there are major effects of habitat suitability on the formation and maintenance of the contact zones.
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