Cycad Literature Database

Browse References

Navigation
2800 references found

Filters

Population Differentiation and Demographic History of the Cycas taiwaniana Complex (Cycadaceae) Endemic to South China as Indicated by DNA Sequences and Microsatellite Markers

Journal Article
📖
Wang XH, Li J, Zhang LM, He ZW, Mei QM, Gong X, Jian SG. 2019. Population Differentiation and Demographic History of the Cycas taiwaniana Complex (Cycadaceae) Endemic to South China as Indicated by DNA Sequences and Microsatellite Markers. Frontiers in Genetics 10 : . https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2019.01238.

Abstract

Historical geology, climatic oscillations, and seed dispersal capabilities are thought to influence the population dynamics and genetics of plants, especially for distribution-restricted and threatened species. Investigating the genetic resources within and among taxa is a prerequisite for conservation management. The Cycas taiwaniana complex consists of six endangered species that are endemic to South China. In this study, we investigated the relationship between phylogeographic history and the genetic structure of the C. taiwaniana complex. To estimate the phylogeographic history of the complex, we assessed the genetic structure and divergence time, and performed phylogenetic and demographic historical analyses. Two chloroplast DNA intergenic regions (cpDNA), two single-copy nuclear genes (SCNGs), and six microsatellite loci (SSR) were sequenced for 18 populations. The SCNG data indicated a high genetic diversity within populations, a low genetic diversity among populations, and significant genetic differentiation among populations. Significant phylogeographical structure was detected. Structure and phylogenetic analyses both revealed that the 18 populations of the C. taiwaniana complex have two main lineages, which were estimated to diverge in the Middle Pleistocene. We propose that Cycas fairylakea was incorporated into Cycas szechuanensis and that the other populations, which are mainly located on Hainan Island, merged into one lineage. Bayesian skyline plot analyses revealed that the C. taiwaniana complex experienced a recent decline, suggesting that the complex probably experienced a bottleneck event. We infer that the genetic structure of the C. taiwaniana complex has been affected by Pleistocene climate shifts, sea-level oscillations, and human activities. In addition to providing new insights into the evolutionary legacy of the genus, the genetic characterizations will be useful for the conservation of Cycas species.

Comments

c8508cdb-f337-4b23-8a4f-a958916d5f49

Cited By 14

Citations are collected from multiple sources and deduplicated for display

Sources: OpenAlex

Citations:

Biological invasion by the cycad‐specific scale pest Aulacaspis yasumatsui ( Diaspididae ) into Cycas revoluta ( Cycadaceae ) populations on Amami‐Oshima and Okinawa ‐jima, Japan
2025 DOI WLoC OpenAlex
Distribution Pattern of Endangered Cycas taiwaniana Carruth. in China Under Climate-Change Scenarios Using the MaxEnt Model
2025 DOI WLoC OpenAlex
Genetic Diversity and Structure of a Critically Endangered Ornamental Species, Rhododendron farinosum, with Extremely Small Populations
2025 DOI OpenAlex
Next-generation sequencing-based population genetics unravels the evolutionary history of Rhodomyrtus tomentosa in China
2025 DOI OpenAlex
The Phylogeography of Selfing Caulokaempferia coenobialis Responded to Pleistocene Karst Development and Transgressions‐Regressions in Southern China
2025 DOI OpenAlex
Sources: OpenAlex & OpenCitations • Counts may differ from Crossref/Google Scholar