“…As the most widely distributed member of the family Pinaceae (Critchfield & Little, 1966;Turna, 2003) in Central and Eastern Europe (including the Carpathians), Scots pine is present only in isolated, peripheral localities. Also, it has been postulated that in Europe Scots pine survived the last glaciations in five main refugia, namely the Iberian Peninsula, the north Apennine Peninsula, south of the Carpathians, the Sudetes, and the Balkans (Prus-Głowacki et al, 2012). Nowadays, these refugial populations represent gene pools of the species and are affected by isolation, mutations and selection due to ecological conditions and genetic drift.…”