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Comparison of genetic diversity in the two arctic-alpine plants Diapensia lapponica var. obovata (Diapensiaceae) and Empetrum nigrum var. japonicum (Empetraceae) between Sakhalin in Russian Far East and Jeju Island in Korea, the southernmost edge of their distribution range

Authors
Chung, Mi YoonLopez-Pujol, JordiMoon, Myung-OkChung, Jae MinKim, Chan SooSun, Byung-YunKim, Ki-JoongChung, Myong Gi
Issue Date
1월-2013
Publisher
SPRINGER JAPAN KK
Keywords
Allozymes; Conservation; Demography; Ecological traits; Genetic diversity; Life-history traits
Citation
POPULATION ECOLOGY, v.55, no.1, pp.159 - 172
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
POPULATION ECOLOGY
Volume
55
Number
1
Start Page
159
End Page
172
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/104295
DOI
10.1007/s10144-012-0348-z
ISSN
1438-3896
Abstract
We compared allozyme variation in the two arctic-alpine plants Diapensia lapponica var. obovata and Empetrum nigrum var. japonicum between Sakhalin Island in Russian Far East, within their range core, and the Korean island of Jeju, their world's southernmost distribution. For D. lapponica var. obovata, Sakhalin populations harbored moderate levels of within-population genetic variation and low among-population divergence, whereas extremely low levels of within-population genetic diversity and high among-population differentiation were found in Jeju Island populations. In contrast, we found moderate levels of within-population variation and low among-population differentiation in E. nigrum var. japonicum in both northern populations (those of Sakhalin and an additional population from northern Japan) and Jeju Island populations. Under a similar scenario of immigration history of arctic-alpine plants on Jeju Island during the glacial periods of the Pleistocene and local persistence through glacial/interglacial cycles, the contrasting genetic structure between D. lapponica var. obovata and E. nigrum var. japonicum is mainly attributable to their different life-history, ecological, and demographic traits: (1) hermaphroditic versus monoecious, dioecious or polygamous, (2) seeds with no adaptations for long-distance dispersal versus berry-like drupes dispersed by animals and birds, and (3) a very small patch near the peak of Mt. Halla with a few hundred individuals versus a relatively continuous distribution around the peak of Mt. Halla with numerous individuals. From a conservation perspective, in situ and ex situ conservation measures should be strengthened for D. lapponica var. obovata on Jeju Island given their extreme rarity there.
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