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Molecular phylogeography of Dryas integrifolia: Glacial refugia and postglacial recolonization

Posted on:1999-11-28Degree:M.ScType:Thesis
University:McGill University (Canada)Candidate:Tremblay-R., Nicolas-OlivierFull Text:PDF
GTID:2460390014467658Subject:Biology
Abstract/Summary:
This thesis addresses the consequences of the last glaciation on the distribution and genetic diversity of arctic flora. The principal aim is to infer the full-glacial and postglacial migrational history of Dryas integrifolia M. Vahl. (Rosaceae) from the intraspecific phylogeny of cpDNA haplotypes along with pollen and macrofossil distribution data. The results suggest that four refugia existed during the last glaciation and that each served as significant sources of recolonization when the ice retreated. The two most important refugia are located in the northwestern Arctic (Beringia and the High Arctic), with two other refugia located southeast of the ice sheet and along the coastal regions of the eastern Arctic. High genetic substructure among populations is likely attributable to past vicariance and recent recolonization events, whereas high local diversity is probably indicative of recolonization from several sources and high gene flow in recent time.
Keywords/Search Tags:Recolonization, Refugia, Arctic
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