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Life in the desert: The impact of geographic and environmental gradients on genetic diversity and population structure of Ivesia webberi
Authors:Israel T. Borokini  Kelly B. Klingler  Mary M. Peacock
Affiliation:1. Ecology, Evolution and Conservation Biology Graduate Program, Department of Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, Reno Nevada, USA ; 2. University and Jepson Herbaria, Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley California, USA ; 3. Department of Environmental Conservation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Massachusetts, USA ; 4. Department of Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, Reno Nevada, USA
Abstract:For range‐restricted species with disjunct populations, it is critical to characterize population genetic structure, gene flow, and factors that influence functional connectivity among populations in order to design effective conservation programs. In this study, we genotyped 314 individuals from 16 extant populations of Ivesia webberi, a United States federally threatened Great Basin Desert using six microsatellite loci. We assessed the effects of Euclidean distance, landscape features, and ecological dissimilarity on the pairwise genetic distance of the sampled populations, while also testing for a potential relationship between Iwebberi genetic diversity and diversity in the vegetative communities. The results show low levels of genetic diversity overall (H e = 0.200–0.441; H o = 0.192–0.605) and high genetic differentiation among populations. Genetic diversity was structured along a geographic gradient, congruent with patterns of isolation by distance. Populations near the species’ range core have relatively high genetic diversity, supporting in part a central‐marginal pattern, while also showing some evidence for a metapopulation dynamic. Peripheral populations have lower genetic diversity, significantly higher genetic distances, and higher relatedness. Genotype cluster admixture results suggest a complex dispersal pattern among populations with dispersal direction and distance varying on the landscape. Pairwise genetic distance strongly correlates with elevation, actual evapotranspiration, and summer seasonal precipitation, indicating a role for isolation by environment, which the observed phenological mismatches among the populations also support. The significant correlation between pairwise genetic distance and floristic dissimilarity in the germinated soil seed bank suggests that annual regeneration in the plant communities contribute to the maintenance of genetic diversity in Iwebberi.
Keywords:central marginal hypothesis, gene flow, isolation by distance, isolation by environment, Ivesia webberi, species‐  genetic diversity
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