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Low Within Population Genetic Variation and High Among Population Differentiation in Cyrtomium falcatum (L.f.) C. Presl (Dryopteridaceae) in Southern Korea: Inference of Population-Establishment History

Authors
Chung, Mi YoonLopez-Pujol, JordiChung, Jae MinKim, Ki-JoongChung, Myong Gi
Issue Date
Oct-2012
Publisher
AMER FERN SOC INC
Keywords
Dryopteridaceae; Cyrtomium; allozymes; conservation; founder effect; glacial refugia; homosporous fern; gametophytic selfing; population history; population structure
Citation
AMERICAN FERN JOURNAL, v.102, no.4, pp.256 - 272
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
AMERICAN FERN JOURNAL
Volume
102
Number
4
Start Page
256
End Page
272
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/107319
DOI
10.1640/0002-8444-102.4.256
ISSN
0002-8444
Abstract
In the Korean Peninsula, the current distribution of the warm-temperate and subtropical vegetation (including many homosporous ferns) is limited to southern coastal areas. Paleoecological data suggest that during the Last Glacial Maximum this vegetation retreated to glacial refugia putatively located in southern Japan and/or southern China, followed by a post-glacial recolonization. Two broad scenarios of post-glacial recolonization could be hypothesized: extant Korean populations are derived from multiple source populations (i.e., from multiple refugia); alternatively, they originate from a single refugium. To test which of these scenarios is more likely, we surveyed patterns of genetic diversity in eight (n = 307) populations of Cyrtomium falcatum from southern Korea. We found extremely low levels of allozyme variation within populations coupled with high among-population differentiation. These data best support the second hypothesis, and indicate that the current genetic diversity may be a consequence of post-glacial long-distance dispersal events and subsequent founder effects. In addition, restricted gene flow among the discontinuous populations of C. falcatum in southern Korea has likely contributed to the high degree of among-population genetic differentiation. From a conservation perspective, several populations should be targeted for both in situ and ex situ conservation, as C. falcatum exhibits a high degree of divergence among populations.
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