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Population structure and demographic history of a tropical lowland rainforest tree species Shorea parvifolia (Dipterocarpaceae) from Southeastern Asia
Authors:Hiroko Iwanaga  Kosuke M Teshima  Ismael A Khatab  Nobuyuki Inomata  Reiner Finkeldey  Iskandar Z Siregar  Ulfah J Siregar  Alfred E Szmidt
Institution:1. Department of Biology, Graduate School of Sciences, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan;2. Laboratory of Plant Genetics, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan;3. Department of Genetics, Faculty of Agriculture, Kafr El‐Sheikh University, Kafr El‐Sheikh, Egypt;4. Department of Environmental Science, International College of Arts and Sciences, Fukuoka Women's University, Japan;5. Institute Forest Genetics and Forest Tree Breeding, Georg‐August‐University of G?ttingen, G?ttingen, Germany;6. Department of Silviculture, Faculty of Forestry, Bogor Agricultural University, Bogor (IPB), Indonesia
Abstract:Distribution of tropical rainforests in Southeastern Asia has changed over geo-logical time scale, due to movement of tectonic plates and/or global climatic changes. Shorea parvifolia is one of the most common tropical lowland rainforest tree species in Southeastern Asia. To infer population structure and demographic history of S. parvifolia, as indicators of temporal changes in the distribution and extent of tropical rainforest in this region, we studied levels and patterns of nucleotide polymorphism in the following five nuclear gene regions: GapC, GBSSI, PgiC, SBE2, and SODH. Seven populations from peninsular Malaysia, Sumatra, and eastern Borneo were included in the analyses. STRUCTURE analysis revealed that the investigated populations are divided into two groups: Sumatra-Malay and Borneo. Furthermore, each group contained one admixed population. Under isolation with migration model, divergence of the two groups was estimated to occur between late Pliocene (2.6 MYA) and middle Pleistocene (0.7 MYA). The log-likelihood ratio tests of several demographic models strongly supported model with population expansion and low level of migration after divergence of the Sumatra-Malay and Borneo groups. The inferred demographic history of S. parvifolia suggested the presence of a scarcely forested land bridge on the Sunda Shelf during glacial periods in the Pleistocene and predominance of tropical lowland rainforest at least in Sumatra and eastern Borneo.
Keywords:Glacial periods  nuclear genes  phylogeography  Shorea  Southeastern Asia
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