首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Nuclear microsatellite variation in Malagasy baobabs (Adansonia,Bombacoideae, Malvaceae) reveals past hybridization and introgression
Authors:Jean-Michel Leong Pock Tsy  Roselyne Lumaret  Elodie Flaven-Noguier  Mathieu Sauve  Marie-Pierre Dubois  Pascal Danthu
Institution:1.DP Forêts et Biodiversité Madagascar (CIRAD, Université d''Antananarivo, FOFIFA), BP 853, Antananarivo 101, Madagascar;2.CNRS-UMR 5175, Centre d''Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive, 1919 route de Mende, F-34293 Montpellier Cedex 5, France;3.CIRAD, UPR 105, Biens et Services des Ecosystèmes Forestiers Tropicaux, Campus de Baillarguet, F-34398 Montpellier Cedex 5, France
Abstract:

Background and Aims Adansonia

comprises nine species, six of which are endemic to Madagascar. Genetic relationships between the Malagasy species remain unresolved due to conflicting results between nuclear and plastid DNA variation. Morphologically intermediate individuals between distinct species have been identified, indicative of interspecific hybridization. In this paper, microsatellite data are used to identify potential cases of hybridization and to provide insights into the evolutionary history of the genus on Madagascar.

Methods

Eleven microsatellites amplified with new primers developed for Adansonia rubrostipa were used to analyse 672 individuals collected at 27 sites for the six Malagasy species and morphologically intermediate individuals. Rates of individual admixture were examined using three Bayesian clustering programs, STRUCTURE, BAPS and NewHybrids, with no a priori species assignment.

Key Results

Population differentiation was coherent, with recognized species boundaries. In the four Malagasy species of section Longitubae, 8·0, 9·0 and 9·5 % of individuals with mixed genotypes were identified by BAPS, NewHybrids and STRUCTURE, respectively. At sites with sympatric populations of A. rubrostipa and A. za, NewHybrids indicated these individuals to be F2 and, predominantly, backcrosses with both parental species. In northern Madagascar, two populations of trees combining A. za and A. perrieri morphology and microsatellite alleles were identified in the current absence of the parental species.

Conclusions

The clear genetic differentiation observed between the six species may reflect their adaptation to different assortments of climate regimes and habitats during the colonization of the island. Microsatellite variation reveals that hybridization probably occurred in secondary contact between species of section Longitubae. This type of hybridization may also have been involved in the differentiation of a local new stabilized entity showing specific microsatellite alleles and morphological characters, suggesting a potential role of hybridization in the recent history of diversification on Madagascar.
Keywords:Nuclear microsatellite (nSSR) variation  genetic structure  hybridization  introgression  Madagascar  Adansonia  baobab
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号