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High migration rates shape the postglacial history of amphi‐Atlantic bryophytes
Authors:Aurélie Désamoré  Jairo Patiño  Patrick Mardulyn  Stuart F. Mcdaniel  Florian Zanatta  Benjamin Laenen  Alain Vanderpoorten
Affiliation:1. Institute of Botany, University of Liège, B22 Sart Tilman, Liège, Belgium;2. Department of Zoology, Swedish Museum of Natural History, Box 3. 50007, SE‐104 05 Stockholm, SwedenCorrespondence: Aurélie Désamoré, E‐mail:;4. Island Ecology and Evolution Research Group, Instituto de Productos Naturales y Agrobiología (IPNA‐CSIC), Tenerife, Canary Islands, 38206 Spain;5. Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Changes and Platform for Enhancing Ecological Research & Sustainability, Universidade dos A?ores, 9700‐042 Angra do Heroísmo, Terceira, A?ores, Portugal;6. Department of Evolutionary Biology and Ecology, Université libre de Bruxelles, Campus du Solbosch, Avenue F.D. Roosevelt 50, 1050 Bruxelles, Belgium;7. Department of Biology, University of Florida, Box 8. 118525, Gainesville, FL, 32611‐8525 USA;9. SciLifeLab Stockholm, Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant Sciences, Stockholm University, Tomtebodav. 23a, 171 21 Solna, Stockholm, Sweden
Abstract:Paleontological evidence and current patterns of angiosperm species richness suggest that European biota experienced more severe bottlenecks than North American ones during the last glacial maximum. How well this pattern fits other plant species is less clear. Bryophytes offer a unique opportunity to contrast the impact of the last glacial maximum in North America and Europe because about 60% of the European bryoflora is shared with North America. Here, we use population genetic analyses based on approximate Bayesian computation on eight amphi‐Atlantic species to test the hypothesis that North American populations were less impacted by the last glacial maximum, exhibiting higher levels of genetic diversity than European ones and ultimately serving as a refugium for the postglacial recolonization of Europe. In contrast with this hypothesis, the best‐fit demographic model involved similar patterns of population size contractions, comparable levels of genetic diversity and balanced migration rates between European and North American populations. Our results thus suggest that bryophytes have experienced comparable demographic glacial histories on both sides of the Atlantic. Although a weak, but significant genetic structure was systematically recovered between European and North American populations, evidence for migration from and towards both continents suggests that amphi‐Atlantic bryophyte population may function as a metapopulation network. Reconstructing the biogeographic history of either North American or European bryophyte populations therefore requires a large, trans‐Atlantic geographic framework.
Keywords:approximate Bayesian computation  bryophytes  dispersal  glacial cycle  postglacial recolonization  refugium
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