| Literature DB >> 28390111 |
Felly Mugizi Tusiime1,2, Abel Gizaw2,3, Tigist Wondimu2,3, Catherine Aloyce Masao2,4, Ahmed Abdikadir Abdi2,5, Vincent Muwanika1, Pavel Trávníček6, Sileshi Nemomissa3, Magnus Popp2, Gerald Eilu1, Christian Brochmann2, Manuel Pimentel2,7.
Abstract
High tropical mountains harbour remarkable and fragmented biodiversity thought to a large degree to have been shaped by multiple dispersals of cold-adapted lineages from remote areas. Few dated phylogenetic/phylogeographic analyses are however available. Here, we address the hypotheses that the sub-Saharan African sweet vernal grasses have a dual colonization history and that lineages of independent origins have established secondary contact. We carried out rangewide sampling across the eastern African high mountains, inferred dated phylogenies from nuclear ribosomal and plastid DNA using Bayesian methods, and performed flow cytometry and AFLP (amplified fragment length polymorphism) analyses. We inferred a single Late Pliocene western Eurasian origin of the eastern African taxa, whose high-ploid populations in one mountain group formed a distinct phylogeographic group and carried plastids that diverged from those of the currently allopatric southern African lineage in the Mid- to Late Pleistocene. We show that Anthoxanthum has an intriguing history in sub-Saharan Africa, including Late Pliocene colonization from southeast and north, followed by secondary contact, hybridization, allopolyploidization and local extinction during one of the last glacial cycles. Our results add to a growing body of evidence showing that isolated tropical high mountain habitats have a dynamic recent history involving niche conservatism and recruitment from remote sources, repeated dispersals, diversification, hybridization and local extinction.Keywords: Africa; colonization; hybridization; polyploidization; tropical-alpine
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28390111 DOI: 10.1111/mec.14136
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ecol ISSN: 0962-1083 Impact factor: 6.185