TY - JOUR
T1 - Multiple colonizations and genetic differentiation in goldenrod populations on recently formed nearshore islands
AU - Kimura, Takuma
AU - Yamada, Takayuki
AU - Sakaguchi, Shota
AU - Ito, Motomi
AU - Maki, Masayuki
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to Drs. S. Sakai, S. Chiba, K. Yonekura, M. Oyama, S. Horie, and Y. Sakamoto, as well as the members of the Botanical Gardens of Tohoku University for their comments on this study; we thank Messrs. Y. Waki and H. Goto for sampling materials. We also thank the members of the Tourist Association of Mikura Island for their assistance during our time on the island. Collection of the species used in this study is not prohibited by any regulations and all the collections were conducted outside legally protected area. This study was supported in part by a Grant-in-Aid from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science to M. I. and M. M.
Funding Information:
We are grateful to Drs. S. Sakai, S. Chiba, K. Yonekura, M. Oyama, S. Horie, and Y. Sakamoto, as well as the members of the Botanical Gardens of Tohoku University for their comments on this study; we thank Messrs. Y. Waki and H. Goto for sampling materials. We also thank the members of the Tourist Association of Mikura Island for their assistance during our time on the island. Collection of the species used in this study is not prohibited by any regulations and all the collections were conducted outside legally protected area. This study was supported in part by a Grant‐in‐Aid from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science to M. I. and M. M.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2022/5
Y1 - 2022/5
N2 - Aim: Although the evolution of island endemic plants has long been investigated, the majority of such studies have focused on species with remarkable levels of morphological variation and on islands substantially far from the mainland. Endemic plants on nearshore oceanic islands have received less attention. We investigate the population genetic structure and dynamics in plants endemic to nearshore and recently formed oceanic islands and examined the possibility of multiple colonizations onto the islands. Location: Japanese mainland Honshu and the adjacent Izu Islands. Taxon: Solidago virgaurea (Asteraceae). Methods: Sixteen and nine populations of S. virgaurea complex were sampled from the mainland and islands respectively; phylogeographical and population genetics analyses, including Bayesian Phylogeographic and Ecological Clustering (BPEC) analysis and Discrete Phylogeographic Approach (DPA) to trace the history of colonization events onto the islands, were performed using plastid DNA and nuclear microsatellite DNA variations. Results: Phylogenetically close plastid DNA haplotypes were shared between the mainland and islands, although the populations of S. virgaurea from different islands tended to exhibit phylogenetically distinct haplotypes. Admixture analyses based on nuclear DNA variations revealed distinct genetic structures between the mainland and island populations. Gene flow among islands is restricted but may partially offset genetic drift on each island. Main conclusions: The genetic structure observed in this study may not have originated from a single dispersal event and successive expansion but rather from at least three colonization events and subsequent gene flow among island populations. Based on the nuclear DNA variations, the Izu Island populations of S. virgaurea are genetically distinct from the mainland ones. Repeated colonization events may have provided sufficient genetic diversity, which would generally be susceptible to founder effects and exert a driving force for evolutionary adaptation, to these oceanic island populations.
AB - Aim: Although the evolution of island endemic plants has long been investigated, the majority of such studies have focused on species with remarkable levels of morphological variation and on islands substantially far from the mainland. Endemic plants on nearshore oceanic islands have received less attention. We investigate the population genetic structure and dynamics in plants endemic to nearshore and recently formed oceanic islands and examined the possibility of multiple colonizations onto the islands. Location: Japanese mainland Honshu and the adjacent Izu Islands. Taxon: Solidago virgaurea (Asteraceae). Methods: Sixteen and nine populations of S. virgaurea complex were sampled from the mainland and islands respectively; phylogeographical and population genetics analyses, including Bayesian Phylogeographic and Ecological Clustering (BPEC) analysis and Discrete Phylogeographic Approach (DPA) to trace the history of colonization events onto the islands, were performed using plastid DNA and nuclear microsatellite DNA variations. Results: Phylogenetically close plastid DNA haplotypes were shared between the mainland and islands, although the populations of S. virgaurea from different islands tended to exhibit phylogenetically distinct haplotypes. Admixture analyses based on nuclear DNA variations revealed distinct genetic structures between the mainland and island populations. Gene flow among islands is restricted but may partially offset genetic drift on each island. Main conclusions: The genetic structure observed in this study may not have originated from a single dispersal event and successive expansion but rather from at least three colonization events and subsequent gene flow among island populations. Based on the nuclear DNA variations, the Izu Island populations of S. virgaurea are genetically distinct from the mainland ones. Repeated colonization events may have provided sufficient genetic diversity, which would generally be susceptible to founder effects and exert a driving force for evolutionary adaptation, to these oceanic island populations.
KW - Japan
KW - insular endemic plants
KW - multiple colonizations
KW - nearshore oceanic islands
KW - phylogeographical analyses
KW - population genetic diversity
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U2 - 10.1111/jbi.14342
DO - 10.1111/jbi.14342
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85127235052
SN - 0305-0270
VL - 49
SP - 836
EP - 852
JO - Journal of Biogeography
JF - Journal of Biogeography
IS - 5
ER -