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Glacial vicariance in Eurasia: mitochondrial DNA evidence from Scots pine for a complex heritage involving genetically distinct refugia at mid-northern latitudes and in Asia Minor
Authors:Krassimir Naydenov  Sauphie Senneville  Jean Beaulieu  Francine Tremblay  Jean Bousquet
Institution:1.Chaire industrielle CRSNG-UQAT-UQAM,Université du Québec en Abitibi-Témiscamingue,Rouyn-Noranda,Canada;2.Chaire de recherche du Canada en génomique forestière et environnementale and Centre d'étude de la forêt,Pavillon Charles-Eugène-Marchand, Université Laval,Québec,Canada;3.Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service,Canadian Wood Fibre Centre,Stn. Sainte-Foy, Quebec,Canada
Abstract:

Background  

At the last glacial maximum, Fennoscandia was covered by an ice sheet while the tundra occupied most of the rest of northern Eurasia. More or less disjunct refugial populations of plants were dispersed in southern Europe, often trapped between mountain ranges and seas. Genetic and paleobotanical evidences indicate that these populations have contributed much to Holocene recolonization of more northern latitudes. Less supportive evidence has been found for the existence of glacial populations located closer to the ice margin. Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) is a nordic conifer with a wide natural range covering much of Eurasia. Fractures in its extant genetic structure might be indicative of glacial vicariance and how different refugia contributed to the current distribution at the continental level. The population structure of Scots pine was investigated on much of its Eurasian natural range using maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA polymorphisms.
Keywords:
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