Literature DB >> 34210795

Contrasting genetic signal of recolonization after rainforest fragmentation in African trees with different dispersal abilities.

Rosalía Piñeiro1,2,3, Olivier J Hardy2, Carolina Tovar4, Shyam Gopalakrishnan5, Filipe Garrett Vieira5, M Thomas P Gilbert5,6.   

Abstract

Although today the forest cover is continuous in Central Africa, this may have not always been the case, as the scarce fossil record in this region suggests that arid conditions might have significantly reduced tree density during the ice ages. Our aim was to investigate whether the dry ice age periods left a genetic signature on tree species that can be used to infer the date of the past fragmentation of the rainforest. We sequenced reduced representation libraries of 182 samples representing five widespread legume trees and seven outgroups. Phylogenetic analyses identified an early divergent lineage for all species in West Africa (Upper Guinea) and two clades in Central Africa: Lower Guinea-North and Lower Guinea-South. As the structure separating the Northern and Southern clades-congruent across species-cannot be explained by geographic barriers, we tested other hypotheses with demographic model testing using δαδι. The best estimates indicate that the two clades split between the Upper Pliocene and the Pleistocene, a date compatible with forest fragmentation driven by ice age climatic oscillations. Furthermore, we found remarkably older split dates for the shade-tolerant tree species with nonassisted seed dispersal than for light-demanding species with long-distance wind-dispersed seeds. Different recolonization abilities after recurrent cycles of forest fragmentation seem to explain why species with long-distance dispersal show more recent genetic admixture between the two clades than species with limited seed dispersal. Despite their old history, our results depict the African rainforests as a dynamic biome where tree species have expanded relatively recently after the last glaciation.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Tropical Africa; genotyping by sequencing; glacial refugia; phylogeography; spatial gradients of genetic diversity

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34210795      PMCID: PMC8271564          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2013979118

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  36 in total

1.  The genome of black cottonwood, Populus trichocarpa (Torr. & Gray).

Authors:  G A Tuskan; S Difazio; S Jansson; J Bohlmann; I Grigoriev; U Hellsten; N Putnam; S Ralph; S Rombauts; A Salamov; J Schein; L Sterck; A Aerts; R R Bhalerao; R P Bhalerao; D Blaudez; W Boerjan; A Brun; A Brunner; V Busov; M Campbell; J Carlson; M Chalot; J Chapman; G-L Chen; D Cooper; P M Coutinho; J Couturier; S Covert; Q Cronk; R Cunningham; J Davis; S Degroeve; A Déjardin; C Depamphilis; J Detter; B Dirks; I Dubchak; S Duplessis; J Ehlting; B Ellis; K Gendler; D Goodstein; M Gribskov; J Grimwood; A Groover; L Gunter; B Hamberger; B Heinze; Y Helariutta; B Henrissat; D Holligan; R Holt; W Huang; N Islam-Faridi; S Jones; M Jones-Rhoades; R Jorgensen; C Joshi; J Kangasjärvi; J Karlsson; C Kelleher; R Kirkpatrick; M Kirst; A Kohler; U Kalluri; F Larimer; J Leebens-Mack; J-C Leplé; P Locascio; Y Lou; S Lucas; F Martin; B Montanini; C Napoli; D R Nelson; C Nelson; K Nieminen; O Nilsson; V Pereda; G Peter; R Philippe; G Pilate; A Poliakov; J Razumovskaya; P Richardson; C Rinaldi; K Ritland; P Rouzé; D Ryaboy; J Schmutz; J Schrader; B Segerman; H Shin; A Siddiqui; F Sterky; A Terry; C-J Tsai; E Uberbacher; P Unneberg; J Vahala; K Wall; S Wessler; G Yang; T Yin; C Douglas; M Marra; G Sandberg; Y Van de Peer; D Rokhsar
Journal:  Science       Date:  2006-09-15       Impact factor: 47.728

Review 2.  Mechanisms and tempo of evolution in the African Guineo-Congolian rainforest.

Authors:  Vanessa Plana
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2004-10-29       Impact factor: 6.237

3.  Evidence of past forest fragmentation in the Congo Basin from the phylogeography of a shade-tolerant tree with limited seed dispersal: Scorodophloeus zenkeri (Fabaceae, Detarioideae).

Authors:  Samuel Vanden Abeele; Steven B Janssens; Rosalía Piñeiro; Olivier J Hardy
Journal:  BMC Ecol Evol       Date:  2021-03-30

4.  Idiosyncratic responses to climate-driven forest fragmentation and marine incursions in reed frogs from Central Africa and the Gulf of Guinea Islands.

Authors:  Rayna C Bell; Juan L Parra; Gabriel Badjedjea; Michael F Barej; David C Blackburn; Marius Burger; Alan Channing; Jonas Maximilian Dehling; Eli Greenbaum; Václav Gvoždík; Jos Kielgast; Chifundera Kusamba; Stefan Lötters; Patrick J McLaughlin; Zoltán T Nagy; Mark-Oliver Rödel; Daniel M Portik; Bryan L Stuart; Jeremy VanDerWal; Ange Ghislain Zassi-Boulou; Kelly R Zamudio
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2017-08-24       Impact factor: 6.185

5.  Phylogenomic approaches reveal how climate shapes patterns of genetic diversity in an African rain forest tree species.

Authors:  Andrew J Helmstetter; Biowa E N Amoussou; Kevin Bethune; Narcisse G Kamdem; Romain Glèlè Kakaï; Bonaventure Sonké; Thomas L P Couvreur
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2020-08-20       Impact factor: 6.185

6.  Comparative phylogeography of West African amphibians and reptiles.

Authors:  Adam D Leaché; Jamie R Oaks; Caleb Ofori-Boateng; Matthew K Fujita
Journal:  Evolution       Date:  2020-02-26       Impact factor: 3.694

7.  Plastome phylogeography in two African rain forest legume trees reveals that Dahomey Gap populations originate from the Cameroon volcanic line.

Authors:  Boris B Demenou; Jérémy Migliore; Myriam Heuertz; Franck K Monthe; Dario I Ojeda; Jan J Wieringa; Gilles Dauby; Laura Albreht; Arthur Boom; Olivier J Hardy
Journal:  Mol Phylogenet Evol       Date:  2020-05-19       Impact factor: 4.286

8.  Bayesian species delimitation in West African forest geckos (Hemidactylus fasciatus).

Authors:  Adam D Leaché; Matthew K Fujita
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2010-06-02       Impact factor: 5.349

9.  AdapterRemoval: easy cleaning of next-generation sequencing reads.

Authors:  Stinus Lindgreen
Journal:  BMC Res Notes       Date:  2012-07-02

10.  Fast and accurate short read alignment with Burrows-Wheeler transform.

Authors:  Heng Li; Richard Durbin
Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2009-05-18       Impact factor: 6.937

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