Genetic consequences of Last Glacial–Holocene changes in snowfall regime in Arnica mallotopus populations: A plant confined to heavy‐snow areas of Japan

Author:

Masuda Kazutoshi1ORCID,Setoguchi Hiroaki12ORCID,Nagasawa Koki1ORCID,Hirota Shun K.3ORCID,Suyama Yoshihisa3ORCID,Sawa Kazuhiro4,Fukumoto Shigeru5,Ishihara Masae I.6ORCID,Abe Harue7ORCID,Tsuboi Hayato8,Tango Tsuguoki9,Mori Sayoko10,Sakaguchi Shota12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies Kyoto University, Yoshida‐Nihonmatsu‐cho Sakyo‐ku 606‐8501 Kyoto Japan

2. Graduate School of Global Environmental Studies Kyoto University, Yoshida‐Honmachi Sakyo‐ku 606‐8501 Kyoto Japan

3. Field Science Center, Graduate School of Agricultural Science Tohoku University 232‐3 Aza‐yomogida, Naruko Onsen Osaki 989‐6711 Miyagi Japan

4. Tendo Yamagata Japan

5. Ashiu Biological Conservation project Kyoto Japan

6. Ashiu Forest Research Station Kyoto University, Ashiu, Miyama‐cho Nantan 601‐0703 Kyoto Japan

7. Faculty of Agriculture Niigata University Sado 952‐2206 Niigata Japan

8. Hakubagoryu Alpine Botanical Garden, Hakuba Kita‐ado Nagano Japan

9. Oki gun Shimane Japan

10. Higashiohmi Shiga Japan

Abstract

AbstractPremiseSnow is an important environmental factor affecting plant distribution. Past changes in snowfall regimes may have controlled the demographies of snow‐dependent plants. However, our knowledge of changes in the distribution and demographies of such plants is limited because of the lack of fossil records.MethodsPopulation genetic and landscape genetic analyses were used to investigate the response of population dynamics of Arnica mallotopus (Asteraceae)—a plant confined to heavy‐snow areas of Japan—to changes in snowfall regimes from the Last Glacial Period to the Holocene.ResultsThe population genetic analysis suggested that the four geographic lineages diverged during the Last Glacial Period. The interaction between reduced snowfall and lower temperatures during this period likely triggered population isolation in separate refugia. Subpopulation differentiation in the northern group was lower than in the southern group. Our ecological niche model predicted that the current distribution was patchy in the southern region; that is, the populations were isolated by topologically flat and climatically unsuitable lowlands. The landscape genetic analysis suggested that areas with little snowfall acted as barriers to the Holocene expansion of species distribution and continued limiting gene flow between local populations.ConclusionsThese findings indicate that postglacial population responses vary among regions and are controlled by environmental and geographic factors. Thus, changes in snowfall regime played a major role in shaping the distribution and genetic structure of the snow‐dependent plant.

Publisher

Wiley

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