To investigate the influence of climate aridification and oscillations on the genetic diversity and evolutionary processes of organisms in the Quaternary in north‐western China, we selected Nitraria sphaerocarpa and examined the phylogeographical structure and response to historical and environmental factors in populations of this species across most of its covered range. We found twelve haplotypes on the basis of two chloroplast DNA sequences (trnH‐psbA and rpl32‐trnL). The drying climate during the Quaternary is proposed to have been a driver for significant genetic isolation and divergence among populations in N. sphaerocarpa. Except for the sharing of haplotype D between the Hami Basin and Hexi Corridor, as well as of haplotype F between the Hexi Corridor and Alxa Desert, network analysis showed haplotypes to be almost completely different from region to region. Analysis of molecular variance indicated that genetic variation primarily occurred among populations and among nine geographical groups that were distinguished by spatial analysis of molecular variance, and a Mantel test showed that the correlation between genetic and geographical distances was significant. On the other hand, there was evidence for the occurrence of an episode of more favourable conditions in some regions. Geographical range expansion of two groups of N. sphaerocarpa populations was supported by significant values for Fu's FS and unimodel mismatch distributions. During the last interglacial period, a warmer and wetter climate contributed to range expansion within portions of the Hexi Corridor. By contrast, based on ecological niche modelling, N. sphaerocarpa was indicated to have had a shrunken and more fragmented range during the Last Glacial Maximum. © 2013 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2013, 109, 757–770.
Southwest China is one of the major global biodiversity hotspots. The Tanaka line, extending within southwestern China from its northwest to its southeast, is an important biogeographical boundary between the Sino-Japanese and Sino-Himalayan floristic regions. Understanding the evolutionary history of the regional keystone species would assist with both reconstructing historical vegetation dynamics and ongoing biodiversity management. In this research, we combined phylogeographic methodologies and species distribution models (SDMs) to investigate the spatial genetic patterns and distribution dynamics of Quercus kerrii, a dominant evergreen oak inhabiting southwest China lowland evergreen-broadleaved forests (EBLFs). A total of 403 individuals were sampled from 44 populations throughout southwest China. SDMs and mismatch distribution analysis indicated that Q. kerrii has undergone northward expansion since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Quantitative analysis revealed that the range expansion of Q. kerrii since the LGM exceeded that of the sympatric mid-elevation species Quercus schottkyana, likely owing to their contrasting distribution elevations and habitat availabilities. The historical climate change since the LGM and the latitude gradient of the region played an important role in shaping the genetic diversity of Q. kerrii. The genetic differentiation index and genetic distance surface of Q. kerrii populations east of the Tanaka line exceeded those to its west. The long-term geographic isolation and environmental heterogeneity between the two sides of the Tanaka line might increase species divergence patterns and local adaptation. This study provides new insights into the historical dynamics of subtropical EBLFs and the changing biota of southwest China.
Previous works resolved diverse phylogenetic positions for genera of the Fabaceae tribe Thermopsideae, without a thoroughly biogeography study. Based on sequence data from nuclear ITS and four cpDNA regions (matK, rbcL, trnH-psbA, trnL-trnF) mainly sourced from GenBank, the phylogeny of tribe Thermopsideae was inferred. Our analyses support the genera of Thermopsideae, with the exclusion of Pickeringia, being merged into a monophyletic Sophoreae. Genera of Sophoreae were assigned into the Thermopsoid clade and Sophoroid clade. Monophyly of Anagyris, Baptisia and Piptanthus were supported in the Thermopsoid clade. However, the genera Thermopsis and Sophora were resolved to be polyphyly, which require comprehensive taxonomic revisions. Interestingly, Ammopiptanthus, consisting of A. mongolicus and A. nanus, nested within the Sophoroid clade, with Salweenia as its sister. Ammopiptanthus and Salweenia have a disjunct distribution in the deserts of northwestern China and the Hengduan Mountains, respectively. Divergence age was estimated based on the ITS phylogenetic analysis. Emergence of the common ancestor of Ammopiptanthus and Salweenia, divergence between these two genera and the split of Ammopiptanthus species occurred at approximately 26.96 Ma, 4.74 Ma and 2.04 Ma, respectively, which may be in response to the second, third and fourth main uplifts of the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, respectively.
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