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Gene exchange across a postglacial contact zone in Fraxinus excelsior L. Cover

Gene exchange across a postglacial contact zone in Fraxinus excelsior L.

Open Access
|Aug 2017

Abstract

Hybridization between divergent lineages of common ash Fraxinus excelsior L. was studied in Slovakia and adjacent regions of Hungary, the Czech Republic and Poland in the contact zone between two postglacial colonization routes originating from different glacial refugia. Thirty-eight common ash populations were studied using a combination of 6 maternally inherited chloroplast microsatellite markers and 7 biparentally inherited nuclear microsatellites (nSSR). Two predominant chloroplast lineages were identified, between which the boundary was very sharp. Populations containing a mixture of different haplotypes were found only in the immediate proximity of the boundary. Bayesian analysis of population structure based on nSSR loci revealed the existence of two clusters, which largely coincided with chloroplast lineages. Both haplotype frequencies and proportions of clusters identified by the Bayesian analysis exhibited a clinal transition over the hybrid zone, with cline widths of 36 km for chloroplast haplotype frequencies (reflecting gene flow by seeds) and 275 km for Bayesian clusters based on nSSR (reflecting gene flow by pollen and seeds). Chloroplast haplotype diversity increased along the boundary between lineages not only because of admixture, but also due to the presence of rare haplotypes. In contrast, diversity at nuclear loci did not exhibit any geographical trend.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/sg-2012-0003 | Journal eISSN: 2509-8934 | Journal ISSN: 0037-5349
Language: English
Page range: 18 - 27
Submitted on: Mar 9, 2011
Published on: Aug 1, 2017
Published by: Johann Heinrich von Thünen Institute
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2017 D. Gömöry, L. Paule, D. Krajmerová, I. Romšáková, J. Piecka, published by Johann Heinrich von Thünen Institute
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.