“…alpine as well as arctic–alpine plants survived in ice‐free refugia south of continental ice sheets (Schönswetter, Paun, Tribsch, & Niklfeld, 2003; Schönswetter et al., 2005), mountain tops within ice sheets (Allen, Marr, McCormick, & Hebda, 2015; Marr, Allen, Hebda, & McCormick, 2013; Stehlik, Blattner, Holderegger, & Bachmann, 2002; Westergaard et al., 2011) and Beringia (far eastern Russia and portions of Alaska and the Yukon, as well as the Bering Land Bridge; Beringia; Abbott, 2000; Abbott & Brochmann, 2003; Eidesen et al., 2013), from which they spread to their current distributions. Several studies have inferred the persistence of isolated populations on high mountains at the southern range margins in North America (Allen, Marr, McCormick, & Hebda, 2012; Allen et al., 2015; Marr et al., 2013), Europe (Eidesen et al., 2013; Ikeda et al., 2017) and the central part of Japan (Ikeda, Higashi, Yakubov, Barkalov, & Setoguchi, 2014; Ikeda, Senni, Fujii, & Setoguchi, 2006, 2008). These marginal populations harbour unique genetic variation; therefore, the importance of southern mountain ranges for the evolution of cold‐adapted plants has been discussed (Winkler et al., 2012).…”