Coalescent simulation and paleodistribution modeling for tabebuia rosealba do not support south american dry forest refugia hypothesis
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Studies based on contemporary plant occurrences and pollen fossil records have proposed
that the current disjunct distribution of seasonally dry tropical forests (SDTFs) across South
America is the result of fragmentation of a formerly widespread and continuously distributed
dry forest during the arid climatic conditions associated with the Last Glacial Maximum
(LGM), which is known as the modern-day dry forest refugia hypothesis.We studied the
demographic history of Tabebuia rosealba (Bignoniaceae) to understand the disjunct geographic
distribution of South American SDTFs based on statistical phylogeography and
ecological niche modeling (ENM). We specifically tested the dry forest refugia hypothesis;
i.e., if the multiple and isolated patches of SDTFs are current climatic relicts of a widespread
and continuously distributed dry forest during the LGM.We sampled 235 individuals across
18 populations in Central Brazil and analyzed the polymorphisms at chloroplast (trnS-trnG,
psbA-trnH and ycf6-trnC intergenic spacers) and nuclear (ITS nrDNA) genomes. We performed
coalescence simulations of alternative hypotheses under demographic expectations
from two a priori biogeographic hypotheses (1. the Pleistocene Arc hypothesis and, 2.
a range shift to Amazon Basin) and other two demographic expectances predicted by
ENMs (3. expansion throughout the Neotropical South America, including Amazon Basin,
and 4. retraction during the LGM). Phylogenetic analyses based on median-joining network
showed haplotype sharing among populations with evidence of incomplete lineage sorting.
Coalescent analyses showed smaller effective population sizes for T. roseoalba during the
LGM compared to the present-day. Simulations and ENM also showed that its current spatial
pattern of genetic diversity is most likely due to a scenario of range retraction during the
LGM instead of the fragmentation from a once extensive and largely contiguous SDTF
across South America, not supporting the South American dry forest refugia hypothesis.
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MELO, Warita Alves de; LIMA-RIBEIRO, Matheus S.; TERRIBILE, Levi Carina; COLLEVATTI, Rosane G. Coalescent simulation and paleodistribution modeling for tabebuia rosealba do not support south american dry forest refugia hypothesis. Plos One, San Francisco, v. 11, n. 7, e0159314, 2016. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0159314. ECollection 2016. Disponível em: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27458982/. Acesso em: 22 mar. 2023.