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Cited 4 time in webofscience Cited 4 time in scopus
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Phylogeography of the endangered orchids <i>Cypripedium japonicum</i> and <i>Cypripedium formosanum</i> in East Asia: Deep divergence at infra- and interspecific levelsopen access

Authors
Han, Li XiaJin, YueZhang, Jun LiLi, Xing LinChung, Mi YoonHerrando-Moraira, SoniaKawahara, TakayukiYukawa, TomohisaChung, Shih-WenChung, Jae MinKim, Young-DongLopez-Pujol, JordiChung, Myong GiTian, Huai Zhen
Issue Date
Mar-2022
Publisher
International Association for Plant Taxonomy
Keywords
chloroplast DNA; dispersal corridor; East Asia; ecological niche modeling (ENM); phylogeographic structure; refugium
Citation
Taxon, v.71, no.4, pp 733 - 757
Pages
25
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Taxon
Volume
71
Number
4
Start Page
733
End Page
757
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/71675
DOI
10.1002/tax.12710
ISSN
0040-0262
1996-8175
Abstract
To date, little is known about the past evolutionary trajectories of rare and endangered orchids native to mainland China, Japan, and Korea (the CJK region). In this study, we focus on two endangered orchids, Cypripedium japonicum (present in the three countries) and C. formosanum (endemic to Taiwan), to understand the divergence/speciation models that would have been operating in this group, including genetic diversity, geographic structure, and colonization pathways across the region. Using a combination of five cpDNA regions, we reconstructed phylogenetic trees and investigated the genetic diversity/structure of 20 populations. Ecological niche modeling was used to gain insight into the paleodistribution and dispersal corridors at the Last Glacial Maximum and to survey climatic niche differences. Populations from mainland China + Korea, Japan, and Taiwan formed three distinct monophyletic lineages and were placed into separate genetic clusters, agreeing with geographic barriers and species boundaries. Populations of C. japonicum in mainland China harbored the highest diversity, suggesting the presence of multiple glacial refugia. The Korean populations would have originated from either western/central or eastern China, probably using a dispersal corridor across the East China Sea shelf. The divergence of C. formosanum is proposed under an allopatric speciation model, also highly influenced by a climate niche shift. In the context of previous studies, a deep divergence in cpDNA sequences between Chinese + Korean and Japanese populations of C. japonicum may be taken as an example of the speciation events of the CJK flora since the late Neogene that have led to its current species richness.
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