Pleistocene climatic changes drove dispersal and isolation of Richterago discoidea (Asteraceae), an endemic plant of campos rupestres in the central and eastern Brazilian sky islands

Abstract We explored the effects of Quaternary climate changes on the campos rupestre sky island ecosystem in central and eastern Brazil studying the phylogeography of Richterago discoidea (Asteraceae) to better understand the effect of historical biogeographic processes on species diversification i...

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Published inBotanical journal of the Linnean Society Vol. 189; no. 2; pp. 132 - 152
Main Authors Barres, Laia, Batalha-Filho, Henrique, Schnadelbach, Alessandra S, Roque, Nádia
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published UK Oxford University Press 25.01.2019
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Summary:Abstract We explored the effects of Quaternary climate changes on the campos rupestre sky island ecosystem in central and eastern Brazil studying the phylogeography of Richterago discoidea (Asteraceae) to better understand the effect of historical biogeographic processes on species diversification in this region. DNA sequences of nuclear (ITS) and plastid (psbA-trnH, rpl32-trnLUAG, trnKUUU-rps16 and ycf3-trnS) markers and 83 AFLP loci were used to genotype up to 90 individuals from 19 populations of R. discoidea. We investigated intraspecific genetic structure, demographic history and spatiotemporal diversification. Also, ecological niche modelling was used to infer palaeodistribution. Three lineages (without strong geographical structure) were identified in the Bayesian genetic structure analysis of 25 haplotypes, whereas AFLPs revealed two lineages with considerable levels of admixture. The origin of diversification of R. discoidea is on the Diamantina Plateau (Espinhaço Meridional, Minas Gerais), from where lineages expanded to the central highlands of Brazil during glacial periods in the Mid-Pleistocene. The current disjunct distribution is a relict of an ancient wide distribution, resulting from retraction during interglacial periods, confining populations to mountain-top sky islands that acted as refugia (Espinhaço Range and Goiás highlands). Expansion within refugium sites during the LGM blurred deeper genetic structure, and pressure of selection in ecological outliers favoured high genetic diversity outside refugia.
ISSN:0024-4074
1095-8339
DOI:10.1093/botlinnean/boy080