Phylogeography of ten native herbaceous species in the temperate region of Japan: implication for the establishment of seed transfer zones for revegetation materials |
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Authors: | Motoshi Tomita Soh Kobayashi Seiya Abe Takaaki Hanai Kaori Kawazu Sonoko Tsuda |
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Affiliation: | 1.Environmental Science Research Laboratory,Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry,Abiko,Japan;2.Techno Chubu Co., Ltd.,Nagoya,Japan;3.Energy Applications R&D Center,Chubu Electric Power Co., Inc.,Nagoya,Japan |
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Abstract: | Revegetation using native species requires the development of seed transfer zones that capture genetic distinctiveness and adaptive potentials while avoiding potential maladaptation and genetic contamination by exotic genotypes. Delineation based on phylogeographic information has recently been used to establish seed transfer zones; however, only a few herbaceous species that are suitable for revegetation have been investigated in the temperate regions of Japan. We investigated the phylogeography of non-coding regions of chloroplast DNA of ten native species in the temperate regions of Japan. Although no species showed clear-cut geographical distributions of the 2–14 haplotypes identified, spatially constrained Bayesian clustering showed two clusters in five species (Calamagrostis epigejos, Eragrostis ferruginea, Imperata cylindrica, Microstegium japonicum, and Microstegium vimineum) but not for others. Posterior modes of clusters for I. cylindrica and M. vimineum showed delineations at Chubu (the middle of Honshu Island), which divide the study region into northeastern and southwestern regions, indicating that these species had recovered from glacial refugia. Posterior mode of cluster for E. ferruginea showed that one consists of a coastal zone along the Pacific Ocean side of western Japan, while the other consists of the remaining area, indicating range expansion from south coast to north. Delineation of C. epigejos and M. japonicum were unclear. The mixed results indicated that establishing seed transfer zones for herbaceous species in Japan will require phylogeographical studies on a wide range of species that may be suitable for revegetation. |
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