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Spatial Patterns of Haplotype Variation in the Epiphytic Bromeliad Catopsis nutans
Authors:Tyler R. Kartzinel  Dakotah A. Campbell  Dorset W. Trapnell
Affiliation:1. Odum School of Ecology, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, U.S.A;2. Department of Plant Biology, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, U.S.A
Abstract:Identifying factors governing the origin, distribution, and maintenance of Neotropical plant diversity is an enduring challenge. To explore the complex and dynamic historical processes that shaped contemporary genetic patterns for a Central American plant species, we investigated the spatial distribution of chloroplast haplotypes of a geographically and environmentally widespread epiphytic bromeliad with wind‐dispersed seeds, Catopsis nutans, in Costa Rica. We hypothesized that genetic discontinuities occur between northwestern and southwestern Pacific slope populations, resembling patterns reported for other plant taxa in the region. Using non‐coding chloroplast DNA from 469 individuals and 23 populations, we assessed the influences of geographic and environmental distance as well as historical climatic variation on the genetic structure of populations spanning >1200 m in elevation. Catopsis nutans revealed seven haplotypes with low within‐population diversity (mean haplotype richness = 1.2) and moderate genetic structure (FST = 0.699). Pairwise FST was significantly correlated with both geographic and environmental distance. The frequency of dominant haplotypes was significantly correlated with elevation. A cluster of nine Pacific lowland populations exhibited a distinct haplotype profile and contained five of the seven haplotypes, suggesting historical isolation and limited seed‐mediated gene flow with other populations. Paleodistribution models indicated lowland and upland habitats in this region were contiguous through past climatic oscillations. Based on our paleodistribution analysis and comparable prior phylogeographic studies, the genetic signature of recent climatic oscillations are likely superimposed upon the distribution of anciently divergent lineages. Our study highlights the unique phylogeographic history of a Neotropical plant species spanning an elevation gradient.
Keywords:Bromeliaceae  chloroplast DNA (cpDNA)  Costa Rica  Fakahatchee Strand  haplotype diversity  paleoclimate  species distribution model  Bromeliaceae  ADN del cloroplasto  Costa Rica  Fakahatchee Strand, diversidad haplotí  pica  paleoclima  modelo de distribució   de especies species
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