• Study supports stronger conservation eff

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Monday, May 02, 2022 22:30:40
    Study supports stronger conservation efforts Appalachians and the Gulf
    Coast, US

    Date:
    May 2, 2022
    Source:
    Clemson University
    Summary:
    Study of Campanula americana supports strengthening conservation
    efforts in glacial refugia areas because of their high genetic
    diversity.

    Conservation of those areas in the southern Appalachians and the
    Gulf Coast has implications for other areas of the country.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== During the last ice age, glaciers covered vast portions of North America.


    ==========================================================================
    But some regions, including areas of the southern Appalachians and the
    Gulf Coast, had more temperate climates in which plants and animals
    survived and thrived. From those regions, called glacial refugia, those populations spread northward as the glaciers receded.

    New research by Clemson University scientist Matthew Koski and colleagues supports strengthening conservation efforts in glacial refugia because
    of their high genetic diversity.

    "These regions are the source of genetic diversity for the rest of the
    species ranges to the north of us," said Koski, an assistant professor in
    the Department of Biological Sciences. "Conservation of these habitats
    in the Southeast is vital and has implications for other areas of the
    country." If forced migrations of species -- the planting populations
    beyond their current range edges -- is necessary, being able to sample
    from regions with high genetic diversity is important.

    "If we don't have those habitats, then that diversity is gone,"
    Koski said.



    ========================================================================== Scientists have tracked climate change since the last glaciation
    and warming was much more gradual that what is happening now with
    anthropogenic climate change, Koski said.

    "These southern range edges are experiencing much warmer and often much
    drier conditions than ever. Are these populations in the glacial refugia
    where the most genetic diversity exists going to be able to respond to
    climate change rapidly? The populations at the northern range edge are
    expected to be the ones contributing to the expansion northward with
    continued warning, but they are also the most genetically depauperate. It
    sets up some interesting scenarios of what's going to happen at each of
    the range edges with continued climate change," he said.

    Particularly in the Northern Hemisphere, lower latitude regions have
    repeatedly served as refugia during glaciation and the source of
    post-glacial range expansion.

    Campanula americana, commonly called American bellflower, is an insect- pollinated herb with showy purple flowers found in eastern North America.

    Using population genetics, the researchers identified multiple locations
    that served as glacial refugia for the species during the Pleistocene glaciation.

    One was in the Deep South in the Gulf Coast area; another was on the Appalachian plateau in what's now eastern Kentucky.



    ========================================================================== After collecting seeds from 24 populations of the plant, researchers
    used controlled crosses in a greenhouse to show that those nearest the
    glacial refugia had the highest potential for speciation. Speciation
    occurs when a group within a species separates from other members and
    develops its own unique characteristics.

    They found that hybrid breakdown, a type of reproductive failure seen
    in the "grandchildren" of the hybrids, is stronger near glacial refugia populations and decreases in hybrids near the leading range edge.

    While Koski's research was limited to one flowering plant, he said he
    would expect to see similar results for other species.

    "We expect elevated genetic diversity in the South," he said.

    The journal Proceedings of the Royal Society Bpublished the findings in
    a paper titled "Hybrid breakdown is elevated near the historical cores
    of a species' range." Other researchers included Laura Galloway from
    the University of Virginia and Jeremiah Busch from Washington State
    University.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Clemson_University. Note: Content
    may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Matthew H. Koski, Laura F. Galloway, Jeremiah W. Busch. Hybrid
    breakdown
    is elevated near the historical cores of a species'
    range. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences,
    2022; 289 (1971) DOI: 10.1098/ rspb.2022.0070 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/05/220502120439.htm

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