...
首页> 外文期刊>Molecular ecology >Phylogeography of Camassia quamash in western North America: postglacial colonization and transport by indigenous peoples
【24h】

Phylogeography of Camassia quamash in western North America: postglacial colonization and transport by indigenous peoples

机译:北美西部山茶(Camassia quamash)的系统志:冰川后的殖民和土著人民的运输

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例

摘要

Recent human activities have spread numerous plant species across the globe, yet it is unclear to what degree historical human activities influenced plant dispersal. In western North America, Camassia quamash was one of the most important food plants for indigenous peoples, who transported its propagules either intentionally or accidentally. We investigated how human and natural dispersal might have contributed to the current pattern of spatial genetic structure in C. quamash by performing phylogeographical surveys at two geographical scales. We sequenced two noncoding regions of chloroplast deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in 226 individuals from 53 populations of C. quamash as well as 126 individuals from 21 populations of the non-food plant Zigadenus venenosus. Contrary to the expectation of anthropogenic transport, C. quamash populations did not exhibit weaker genetic structure than Z. venenosus populations. We also failed to find convincing evidence for signatures of transport. Instead, our data showed strong effects of past glaciation and geographical barriers of the mountains in the Cascade Range, Olympic Peninsula and Vancouver Island. West of the Cascades, the species appears to have largely migrated northward from a southern refugium after deglaciation, whereas few populations having a highly divergent haplotype might have survived in southwestern Washington. Our data suggest that despite substantial ethnobotanical evidence for anthropogenic transport, the current pattern of genetic structure of C. quamash does not show any detectable signatures of transport by indigenous peoples and is better understood as the result of natural dispersal processes.
机译:最近的人类活动已在全球范围内传播了许多植物物种,但尚不清楚历史人类活动在多大程度上影响了植物的传播。在北美西部,印度樟树(Camassia quamash)是土著人民最重要的粮食植物之一,他们有意或无意地运输了它们的繁殖体。我们通过在两个地理尺度上进行系统地理学调查,研究了人类和自然扩散如何可能对qua quamash空间遗传结构的当前模式做出了贡献。我们对来自53个拟南芥种群的226个个体以及来自非食用植物Zigadenus venenosus的21个种群的126个个体的叶绿体脱氧核糖核酸(DNA)的两个非编码区进行了测序。与人为运输的预期相反,quamash种群没有表现出比Z. venenosus种群更弱的遗传结构。我们也没有找到令人信服的运输签名证据。相反,我们的数据显示了过去的冰川作用以及喀斯喀特山脉,奥林匹克半岛和温哥华岛山脉的地理障碍的强烈影响。在喀斯喀特山脉以西,该物种似乎在冰消融化后从南部避难所向北大部分迁徙,而华盛顿西南部地区几乎没有幸存的具有高度单倍型的种群。我们的数据表明,尽管有大量的人为植物学证据证明了人为运输,但目前夸克麦斯的遗传结构模式并未显示出土著人民可检测到的运输特征,并且由于自然扩散过程而得到了更好的理解。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号