Chloroplast DNA haplotype diversity and postglacial recolonization of Hagenia abyssinica (Bruce) J.F. Gmel. in Ethiopia

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Abstract

We investigated genetic variation of 273 individuals from 25 populations of the monotypic species Hagenia abyssinica (Rosaceae) from the highlands of Ethiopia at three chloroplast microsatellite loci. The objectives were to infer the factors that shaped the genetic structure and to reconstruct the recolonization history of the species. Six haplotypes that were phylogenetically grouped into two lineages were identified. Homology of the three loci to the respective regions of the chloroplast genome was confirmed by sequencing. The chloroplast haplotypes found in Hagenia showed a clear pattern of congruence between their geographical distribution and genealogical relationships. A very low haplotype diversity within populations (h S = 0.079, v S = 0.058) and a very high population differentiation (G ST = 0.899, N ST = 0.926) was observed, reflecting very low mixing between recolonizing lineages. Restricted gene flow through seeds, rare long-distance dispersal, contiguous range expansion and mutation shaped the genetic structure of Hagenia. Fossil pollen records suggested that the trend of postglacial recolonization of Hagenia was first in the south and latter went to the north in Ethiopia.

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Ayele, T. B., Gailing, O., Umer, M., & Finkeldey, R. (2009). Chloroplast DNA haplotype diversity and postglacial recolonization of Hagenia abyssinica (Bruce) J.F. Gmel. in Ethiopia. Plant Systematics and Evolution, 280(3–4), 175–185. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00606-009-0177-5

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