| Literature DB >> 35669962 |
Carmen Benítez-Benítez1, María Sanz-Arnal2, Malvina Urbani3, Pedro Jiménez-Mejías2, Santiago Martín-Bravo1.
Abstract
Anticipating the evolutionary responses of species to ongoing climate change is essential to propose effective management and conservation measures. The Western Mediterranean Basin constitutes one of the hotspots of biodiversity where the effects of climate change are expected to be more dramatic. Plant species with ecological relevance constitute ideal models to evaluate and predict the impact of climate change on ecosystems. Here we investigate these impacts through the spatio-temporal comparison of genetic diversity/structure (AFLPs), potential distribution under different future scenarios of climate change, and ecological space in two Western Mediterranean sister species of genus Carex. Both species are ecologically key in their riparian habitats, but display contrasting distribution patterns, with one widespread in the Iberian Peninsula and North Africa (C. reuteriana), while the other (C. panormitana) is a restricted, probably endangered, Central Mediterranean endemic. At present, we found a strong genetic structure driven by geography in both species, and lower values of genetic diversity and a narrower ecological space in C. panormitana than in C. reuteriana, while the allelic rarity was higher in the former than in C. reuteriana subspecies. Future projections predict an overall dramatic reduction of suitable areas for both species under all climate change scenarios, which could be almost total for C. panormitana. In addition, gene diversity was inferred to decrease in all taxa, with genetic structure reinforcing in C. reuteriana by the loss of admixture among populations. Our findings stress the need for a reassessment of C. panormitana conservation status under IUCN Red List criteria and the implementation of conservation measures.Entities:
Keywords: Conservation genetics; Ecological niche; Global climate change; Habitat loss; Mediterranean basin; Restricted endemic; Species distribution modeling
Year: 2022 PMID: 35669962 PMCID: PMC9165605 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.13464
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 3.061
Geographic location and voucher of each sampled population of C. reuteriana (two subspecies) and C. panormitana, average gene diversity at ramet and genet level for present and future (2081–2100) under RCP2.6 GCC scenario, and allelic rarity levels (DW).
| Taxon/Population | Locality | Voucher/Herbarium | Number of sampled individuals | Longitude/Latitude | DW present (genet) | Mean gene diversity ± SD (present; ramet level) | Mean gene diversity ±SD (present; genet level) | Mean gene diversity ± SD (future; ramet level) | Mean gene diversity ±SD (future; genet level) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 69 | 905.394 | 0.184 | 0.176 | |||||
| 29 | 154.041 | 0.142 | 0.107 | ||||||
| REU_POR-TM_1 | Portugal, Tras os Montes, Lamego, Bigorne, Petrarouca | M. Escudero et al., 37ME07 (UPOS-7374) | 6 | −7.88/41.03 | 13.558 | 0.106 ± 0.064 | |||
| REU_POR-BL_2 | Portugal, Beira Litoral, Coimbra, Lousã | M. Escudero et al., 60ME07 (UPOS-7373) | 7 | −8.23/40.10 | 11.873 | 0.083 ± 0.048 | |||
| REU_SPA-Av_3 | Spain, Ávila, Sierra de Gredos, Las Chorreras del Tormes | J.M. Marín, 5504JMM (UPOS-1004) | 5 | −5.16/40.34 | 25.219 | 0.110 ± 0.069 | IAE | ||
| REU_SPA-CcN_4 | Spain, Cáceres, Valley of Jerte | P. Jiménez-Mejías & I. Pulgar, 57PJM07 (UPOS-6957) | 4 | −5.75/40.22 | 9.278 | 0.114 ± 0.077 | IAE | ||
| REU_SPA-CcS_5 | Spain, Cáceres, Ibor river | P. Jiménez-Mejías et al., 24PJM13 (UPOS-5449) | 4 | −5.44/39.62 | 21.162 | 0.183 ± 0.122 | IAE | ||
| REU_SPA-To_6 | Spain, Toledo, Navalucillos | P. Jiménez-Mejías et al., 60PJM13 (UPOS-5479) | 3 | −4.66/39.64 | 9.189 | 0.158 ± 0.120 | IAE | ||
| 40 | 324.723 | 0.170 | 0.164 | ||||||
| MAU_SPA-Se_7 | Spain, Sevilla, El Ronquillo, Rivera de Huelva | P. Jiménez-Mejías, 35PJM07 (UPOS-7372) | 7 | −6.17/37.67 | 21.125 | 0.155 ± 0.089 | |||
| MAU_SPA-CaGu_8 | Spain, Cádiz, El Gastor, Guadalete river | P. Jiménez-Mejías, 34PJM07 (UPOS-7371) | 5 | −5.45/36.88 | 8.625 | 0.100 ± 0.063 | |||
| MAU_SPA-CaAl_9 | Spain, Cádiz, Alcornocales Natural Park, | P. Jiménez-Mejías & I. Pulgar, 17PJM07 (UPOS) | 8 | −5.59/36.55 | 24.108 | 0.084 ± 0.048 | |||
| MAU_SPA-J_10 | Spain, Jaén, | P. Jiménez-Mejías & L. Reina, 67PJM09 (UPOS) | 8 | −3.06/38.39 | 25.558 | 0.103 ± 0.058 | IAE | ||
| MAU_MOR-Lao_11 | Morocco, Tanger, Rif, Oued Laou | A.J. Chaparro et al., 8AJC05 (UPOS-1637) | 5 | −5.30/35.14 | 13.032 | 0.131 ± 0.081 | |||
| MAU_MOR-Lou_12 | Morocco, Tanger, Rif, Oued Loukos | A.J. Chaparro et al., 3AJC05 (UPOS-1630) | 7 | −5.44/35.03 | 24.417 | 0.114 ± 0.066 | |||
|
| 61 | 436.028 | 0.128 | 0.133 | 0.118 | 0.100 | |||
| Tunisia-Sicily | 23 | 114.057 | 0.115 | ||||||
| PAN_TUN_13 | Tunisia, Jendouba, El Feija National Park | P. Jiménez-Mejías & J.E. Rodríguez, 132PJM13 (UPOS-6636) | 9 | 8.31/36.49 | 36.949 | 0.067 ± 0.038 | IAE | ||
| PAN_SIC_15 | Italy, Sicily, Fiume Oreto | D. Cusimano s.n. (SS) | 14 | 13.34/38.09 | 51.900 | 0.077 ± 0.041 | |||
| Sardinia | 38 | 110.234 | 0.032 | 0.037 | |||||
| PAN_SAR-Bau_16 | Italy, Sardinia, Bau Mela river, Villagrande | M. Urbani, 2013 (SS) | 9 | 9.42/39.98 | 11.239 | 0.024 ± 0.015 | 0.033 ± 0.022 | 0.024 ± 0.015 | 0.033 ± 0.022 |
| PAN_SAR-Pira_17 | Italy, Sardinia, Cantoniera, Pirae´onni, Villagrande | M. Urbani, 2013 (SS) | 10 | 9.40/40.02 | 7.471 | 0.026 ± 0.016 | 0.031±0.021 | 0.026 ± 0.016 | 0.031 ± 0.021 |
| PAN_SAR-Ber_18 | Italy, Sardinia, Ramacaso river, Berchidda | M. Urbani, 2013 (SS) | 8 | 9.24/40.82 | 7.934 | 0.023 ± 0.015 | |||
| PAN_SAR-Cal_19 | Italy, Sardinia, Miriacheddu river, Calangianus | M. Urbani, 2013 (SS) | 11 | 9.26/40.89 | 7.577 | 0.012 ± 0.008 | 0.028 ± 0.030 | 0.012 ± 0.008 | 0.028 ± 0.030 |
Note:
Labelling of the populations specifies the taxa (REU, Carex reuteriana subsp. reuteriana; MAU, Carex reuteriana subsp. mauritanica; PAN, Carex panormitana), and the TDWG botanical country abbreviation (Brummit, 2001) (MOR, Morocco; POR, Portugal; SAR, Sardinia; SIC, Sicily; SPA, Spain; TUN, Tunisia). Herbarium acronyms are according to Index Herbariorum (Thiers, 2020). Populations inferred as extinct (IAE) under RCP2.6 scenario for 2081–2100 are not included in the genetic diversity calculation.
Figure 1Main results of the analyses of present genetic structure in C. reuteriana-C. panormitana.
(A) Neighbor-joining tree based on Nei-Li genetic distances obtained from AFLP phenotypes for all sampled individuals; numbers above branches indicate bootstrap values (>50%); (B) DAPC scatter plot showing the discriminant function (axis x) and density (axis y) across two principal components; (C) BAPS admixture bars obtained for all sampled individuals, each represented by a bar. Colours represent the taxonomic or geographic adscription of samples: C. reuteriana subsp. reuteriana (blue), C. reuteriana subsp. mauritanica (green), and C. panormitana (red -Sardinia-, pink -Sicily-, and purple -Tunisia-). In DAPC (B), purple represents both Sicilian and Tunisian populations of C. panormitana; and lines below each density plot represent individuals. In BAPS (C), two shades of green are used to represent underlying geographic structure found within C. reuteriana subsp. mauritanica (dark green -northern Africa and south of the Guadalquivir Valley populations-, light green-Sierra Morena populations-).
AMOVA analyses for AFLPs data.
| Grouping compared and source of variation | d.f. | Sum of squares | Variance components | Percentage of variation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-Whole dataset (two groups: | ||||
| Among groups | 2 | 622.957 | 6.24105 | 28.06% |
| Among pops. | 15 | 800.836 | 6.46433 | 37.22% |
| Within pops. | 112 | 798.007 | 7.12506 | 34.73% |
|
| ||||
| Among pops. | 10 | 369.104 | 4.65780 | 39.82% |
| Within pops. | 57 | 593.411 | 10.41071 | 60.18% |
|
| ||||
| Among pops. | 3 | 44.146 | 1.16277 | 68.76% |
| Within pops. | 55 | 204.596 | 3.71993 | 31.24% |
| 2-Whole dataset (four groups: | ||||
| Among groups | 3 | 920.170 | 8.24129 | 42.13% |
| Among pops. | 14 | 503.623 | 4.19747 | 21.46% |
| Within pops. | 112 | 798.007 | 7.12506 | 36.42% |
| Among pops. | 5 | 117.297 | 2.70605 | 20.36% |
| Within pops. | 23 | 243.393 | 10.58230 | 79.64% |
| Among pops. | 5 | 251.807 | 6.05238 | 37.02% |
| Within pops. | 34 | 350.018 | 10.29464 | 62.98% |
| Among pops. | 1 | 90.374 | 7.64231 | 53.51% |
| Within pops. | 21 | 139.452 | 6.64059 | 46.49% |
| Among pops. | 3 | 44.146 | 1.35354 | 41.40% |
| Within pops. | 34 | 65.144 | 1.91599 | 58.60% |
Note:
The first group includes for comparisons the Carex reuteriana-C. panormitana complex and for each species separately. The second group compares the four AFLPs groups found.
Figure 2Population genetic structure analyses.
(A) Population genetic structure for present times inferred by STRUCTURE, and (B) for future conditions (2081–2100) under RCP2.6 scenario projected with POPS. Circles indicate sampled populations of C. reuteriana subsp. reuteriana, C. reuteriana subsp. mauritanica, and C. panormitana. Colours are as in Fig. 1 and represent the identified genetic groups (K = 2 for the three taxa). Pie charts show the proportion of individuals in each population assigned to each of the two genetic groups. Likewise, colour bars represent the adscription of all sampled individuals to each of the two genetic groups detected for each taxa.
Figure 3Predicted changes of potential distribution inferred by Biomod.
Projections comparing present and future times (2081–2100) under RCP2.6 (top maps) and RCP8.5 (bottom maps) climatic change scenarios for (A, B) C. reuteriana subsp. reuteriana, (C, D) C. reuteriana subsp. mauritanica, and (E, F) C. panormitana. Future projections represent the consensus SDM averaged across six GCMs. Percentages indicate the proportion of potential range inferred to be gained, lost, or to remain stable in the future in comparison with the present, according to the following colour scheme: red areas are currently suitable areas predicted to be lost, orange areas are currently suitable areas projected to remain stable, and green areas are currently unsuitable areas projected to become suitable. Black dots represent current occurrences of each taxon used for SDM.