Late Pleistocene molecular dating of past population fragmentation and demographic changes in African rain forest tree species supports the forest refuge hypothesis

Phylogeographical signatures of past population fragmentation and demographic change have been reported in several African rain forest trees. These signatures have usually been interpreted in the light of the Pleistocene forest refuge hypothesis, although dating these events has remained impracticab...

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Main Authors: Duminil, J., Mona, S., Mardulyn, P., Doumenge, C., Walmacq, F., Doucet, J.L., Hardy, Olivier J.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Wiley 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/67360
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author Duminil, J.
Mona, S.
Mardulyn, P.
Doumenge, C.
Walmacq, F.
Doucet, J.L.
Hardy, Olivier J.
author_browse Doucet, J.L.
Doumenge, C.
Duminil, J.
Hardy, Olivier J.
Mardulyn, P.
Mona, S.
Walmacq, F.
author_facet Duminil, J.
Mona, S.
Mardulyn, P.
Doumenge, C.
Walmacq, F.
Doucet, J.L.
Hardy, Olivier J.
author_sort Duminil, J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Phylogeographical signatures of past population fragmentation and demographic change have been reported in several African rain forest trees. These signatures have usually been interpreted in the light of the Pleistocene forest refuge hypothesis, although dating these events has remained impracticable because of inadequate genetic markers. We assess the timing of interspecific and intraspecific genetic differentiation and demographic changes within two rain forest Erythrophleum tree species (Fabaceae: Caesalpinioideae).Tropical forests of Upper Guinea (West Africa) and Lower Guinea (Atlantic Central Africa).Six single‐copy nuclear genes were used to characterize the phylogeographical patterns of the parapatric sister species Erythrophleum suaveolens (characteristic of semi‐deciduous or gallery forests) and Erythrophleum ivorense (characteristic of evergreen forests). The number of gene pools within each species was determined and the timings of their divergence and past demographic changes were estimated using Bayesian‐based coalescent approaches.Three geographically separated gene pools were identified within E. suaveolens, and a single gene pool was inferred in E. ivorense. All gene pools show signatures of demographic bottlenecks concomitant with the last glacial period (c. 120–12 ka). Species‐tree inferences show that the two species diverged c. 600 ka, whereas the divergence between E. suaveolens gene pools was dated to the late Pleistocene (first divergence c. 120 ka, second c. 60 ka).(1) Molecular dating of demographic changes of two African tropical forest tree species is consistent with the Pleistocene forest refuge hypothesis. (2) Tree species from Guinean evergreen tropical forests might have been less affected by past climate change than semi‐deciduous species. (3) Our phylogeographical data support a recent date (Holocene) of the last opening of the Dahomey Gap.
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spelling CGSpace673602025-11-12T05:46:26Z Late Pleistocene molecular dating of past population fragmentation and demographic changes in African rain forest tree species supports the forest refuge hypothesis Duminil, J. Mona, S. Mardulyn, P. Doumenge, C. Walmacq, F. Doucet, J.L. Hardy, Olivier J. tropical zones species climate change phylogeny rain forests Phylogeographical signatures of past population fragmentation and demographic change have been reported in several African rain forest trees. These signatures have usually been interpreted in the light of the Pleistocene forest refuge hypothesis, although dating these events has remained impracticable because of inadequate genetic markers. We assess the timing of interspecific and intraspecific genetic differentiation and demographic changes within two rain forest Erythrophleum tree species (Fabaceae: Caesalpinioideae).Tropical forests of Upper Guinea (West Africa) and Lower Guinea (Atlantic Central Africa).Six single‐copy nuclear genes were used to characterize the phylogeographical patterns of the parapatric sister species Erythrophleum suaveolens (characteristic of semi‐deciduous or gallery forests) and Erythrophleum ivorense (characteristic of evergreen forests). The number of gene pools within each species was determined and the timings of their divergence and past demographic changes were estimated using Bayesian‐based coalescent approaches.Three geographically separated gene pools were identified within E. suaveolens, and a single gene pool was inferred in E. ivorense. All gene pools show signatures of demographic bottlenecks concomitant with the last glacial period (c. 120–12 ka). Species‐tree inferences show that the two species diverged c. 600 ka, whereas the divergence between E. suaveolens gene pools was dated to the late Pleistocene (first divergence c. 120 ka, second c. 60 ka).(1) Molecular dating of demographic changes of two African tropical forest tree species is consistent with the Pleistocene forest refuge hypothesis. (2) Tree species from Guinean evergreen tropical forests might have been less affected by past climate change than semi‐deciduous species. (3) Our phylogeographical data support a recent date (Holocene) of the last opening of the Dahomey Gap. 2015-08 2015-07-22T09:44:32Z 2015-07-22T09:44:32Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/67360 en Limited Access application/pdf Wiley Duminil, J.; Mona, S.; Mardulyn, P.; Doumenge, C.; Walmacq, F.; Doucet, J.L.; Hardy, O.J. (2015) Late Pleistocene molecular dating of past population fragmentation and demographic changes in African rain forest tree species supports the forest refuge hypothesis. Journal of Biogeography, 42(8) p.1443–1454 ISSN: 1365-2699
spellingShingle tropical zones
species
climate change
phylogeny
rain forests
Duminil, J.
Mona, S.
Mardulyn, P.
Doumenge, C.
Walmacq, F.
Doucet, J.L.
Hardy, Olivier J.
Late Pleistocene molecular dating of past population fragmentation and demographic changes in African rain forest tree species supports the forest refuge hypothesis
title Late Pleistocene molecular dating of past population fragmentation and demographic changes in African rain forest tree species supports the forest refuge hypothesis
title_full Late Pleistocene molecular dating of past population fragmentation and demographic changes in African rain forest tree species supports the forest refuge hypothesis
title_fullStr Late Pleistocene molecular dating of past population fragmentation and demographic changes in African rain forest tree species supports the forest refuge hypothesis
title_full_unstemmed Late Pleistocene molecular dating of past population fragmentation and demographic changes in African rain forest tree species supports the forest refuge hypothesis
title_short Late Pleistocene molecular dating of past population fragmentation and demographic changes in African rain forest tree species supports the forest refuge hypothesis
title_sort late pleistocene molecular dating of past population fragmentation and demographic changes in african rain forest tree species supports the forest refuge hypothesis
topic tropical zones
species
climate change
phylogeny
rain forests
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/67360
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