Author:
Wagutu Godfrey Kinyori,Fan Xiangrong,Fu Wenlong,Li Wei,Chen Yuanyuan
Abstract
AbstractGlobal aquatic habitats are undergoing rapid degradation and fragmentation as a result of land-use change and climate change. Understanding the genetic variability and adaptive potential of aquatic plant species is thus important for conservation purposes. In this study, we investigated the role of environment, landscape heterogeneity and geographical distance in shaping the genetic structure of 28 natural populations ofZizania latifolia(Griseb.) Turcz. Ex Stapf in China based on 25 microsatellite markers. Genetic structure was investigated by analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA), estimation ofFST, Bayesian clustering and Thermodynamic Integration (TI) methods. Isolation by environment (IBE), isolation by resistance (IBR) and isolation by distance (IBD) hypotheses were compared using a reciprocal causal model (RCM). Further, generalized linear models and spatially explicit mixed models, by using geographic, landscape and genetic variables, were developed to elucidate the role of environment in drivingZ. latifoliagenetic diversity. The genetic differentiation across all populations was high:FST= 0.579; Øpt= 0.578. RCM exclusively supported IBE in shaping genetic structuring, only partial support for IBR, but not for IBD. Maximum temperature of the warmest month and precipitation seasonality were the plausible parameters responsible for genetic diversity. After controlling for spatial effect and landscape complexity, precipitation seasonality was significantly associated with genetic diversity. Based on these findings, genetic structure ofZ. latifoliaacross China seem to be as a result of local adaptation. Environmental gradient and topographical barriers, rather than geographical isolation, influence genetic differentiation of aquatic species across China resulting in instances of local adaptation.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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