Chloroplast Haplotype Diversity in the White Oak Populations of the Italian Peninsula, Sicily, and Sardinia

Author:

Di Pietro Romeo12ORCID,Quaranta Luca3ORCID,Mattioni Claudia24ORCID,Simeone Marco Cosimo5ORCID,Di Marzio Piera23ORCID,Proietti Elisa1,Fortini Paola23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Planning, Design, and Architecture Technology (PDTA), Sapienza University of Rome, Via Flaminia 70, 00196 Roma, Italy

2. National Biodiversity Future Center (NBFC), 90133 Palermo, Italy

3. Department of Biosciences and Territory, University of Molise, Via Hertz s.n.c., 86090 Pesche, Italy

4. CNR—Research Institute on Terrestrial Ecosystems (IRET), Viale Guglielmo Marconi 2, 05010 Porano, Italy

5. Department of Agricultural and Forestry Science (DAFNE), University of Tuscia, Via S. Camillo de’ Lellis, 01100 Viterbo, Italy

Abstract

A phylogeographic study on the chloroplast DNA of natural white oak forests (Quercus subgen. Quercus, sect. Quercus) was carried out to identify possible haplotype-structured distribution within the Italian Peninsula, Sicily, and Sardinia. Sixty white oak populations belonging to Q. frainetto, Q. robur and the collective groups Q. petraea and Q. pubescens were considered and analyzed by combining five Chloroplast Simple Sequence Repeat (cpSSR) markers. A total of 28 haplotypes were detected. Central and southern Italy displayed the highest variability (14 and 10 haplotypes, respectively), followed by northern Italy (7), Sardinia (7), and Sicily (5). A complex geographical structure of the haplotype distribution emerged, highlighting (i) a high number of low-frequency haplotypes; (ii) the marked isolation of Sardinia; (iii) the occurrence of haplotypes widely distributed throughout the Italian Peninsula; (iv) the idiosyncrasy of Sicily, which exhibits exclusive haplotypes, and haplotypes shared with Sardinia and the rest of the Italian Peninsula. The haplotype distribution was also found to be partially related to the taxonomic identity of the specimens, with the following features emerging: a geographic separation between the central Italy and southern Italy Q. frainetto populations, an unexpected discontinuity between the Calabrian and Sicilian Q. petraea subsp. austrotyrrhenica populations, and the absence of the most common haplotype among the Q. pubescens populations of central and southern Italy.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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