@article{5d486c4cf3294ab4aef675c22ea9ff8d,
title = "Genetic consequences of plant edaphic specialization to solfatara fields: Phylogenetic and population genetic analysis of Carex angustisquama (Cyperaceae)",
abstract = "Edaphic specialization is one of the main drivers of plant diversification and has multifaceted effects on population dynamics. Carex angustisquama is a sedge plant growing only on heavily acidified soil in solfatara fields, where only extremophytes can survive. Because of the lack of closely related species in similar habitats and its disjunct distribution, the species offers ideal settings to investigate the effects of adaptation to solfatara fields and of historical biogeography on the genetic consequences of plant edaphic specialization to solfatara fields. Here, genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms were used to reveal the phylogenetic origin of C. angustisquama, and 16 expressed sequence tag–simple sequence repeat markers were employed to infer population demography of C angustisquama. Molecular phylogenetic analysis strongly indicated that C. angustisquama formed a monophyletic clade with Carex doenitzii, a species growing on nonacidified soil in the sympatric subalpine zone. The result of population genetic analysis showed that C. angustisquama has much lower genetic diversity than the sister species, and notably, all 16 loci were completely homozygous in most individuals of C. angustisquama. Approximate Bayesian computation analysis supported the model that assumed hierarchical declines of population size through its evolutionary sequence. We propose that the edaphic specialist in solfatara fields has newly attained the adaptation to solfatara fields in the process of speciation. Furthermore, we found evidence of a drastic reduction in genetic diversity in C. angustisquama, suggesting that the repeated founder effects associated with edaphic specialization and subsequent population demography lead to the loss of genetic diversity of this extremophyte in solfatara fields.",
keywords = "Carex angustisquama, extremophyte, loss of genetic diversity, repeated founder effect, solfatara field",
author = "Koki Nagasawa and Hiroaki Setoguchi and Masayuki Maki and Hayato Goto and Keitaro Fukushima and Yuji Isagi and Yoshihisa Suyama and Ayumi Matsuo and Yoshihiro Tsunamoto and Kazuhiro Sawa and Shota Sakaguchi",
note = "Funding Information: We are grateful to Dr K. Yonekura (Tohoku University), Mr N. Tashita (Tokyo Prefecture), Ms F. Takahashi (Fukushima Prefecture), Dr K. Horie (Asahikawa City Northern Wild Plants Garden), Ms S. Mori (Shiga Prefecture), Mr S. Fukumoto (Ashiu Biological Conservation Project) and Mr. S. Kurata (Tokyo University) for support with sampling of plant materials. We also thank Ashiu forest research station (Kyoto University), Tohoku regional environment office (Japanese ministry of the environment), Tohoku Regional Forest Office (Japanese Forestry agency), Miyagi prefecture government, and Iwate prefecture government for permitting and supporting our field work. This research was financially supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (Bilateral Program “The spatial and temporal dimensions and underlying mechanisms of lineage divergence and plant speciation of keystone species in Sino‐Japanese Forest subkingdom” and Grant‐in‐Aid for Young Scientists B [no. 17K15286]), the SICORP Program of the Japan Science and Technology Agency (“Spatial‐temporal dimensions and underlying mechanisms of lineage diversification and pattern of genetic variation of keystone plant taxa in warm‐temperate forests of Sino‐Japanese Floristic Region”; grant no. 4‐1403), the TAKARA Harmonist Fund, the Nissei Fund, and the Pro Natura Foundation Japan for the Ashiu Biological Conservation project. Funding Information: We are grateful to Dr K. Yonekura (Tohoku University), Mr N. Tashita (Tokyo Prefecture), Ms F. Takahashi (Fukushima Prefecture), Dr K. Horie (Asahikawa City Northern Wild Plants Garden), Ms S. Mori (Shiga Prefecture), Mr?S. Fukumoto (Ashiu Biological Conservation Project) and Mr. S. Kurata (Tokyo University) for support with sampling of plant materials. We also thank Ashiu forest research station (Kyoto University), Tohoku regional environment office (Japanese ministry of the environment), Tohoku Regional Forest Office (Japanese Forestry agency), Miyagi prefecture government, and Iwate prefecture government for permitting and supporting our field work. This research was financially supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (Bilateral Program ?The spatial and temporal dimensions and underlying mechanisms of lineage divergence and plant speciation of keystone species in Sino-Japanese Forest subkingdom? and Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists B [no. 17K15286]), the SICORP Program of the Japan Science and Technology Agency (?Spatial-temporal dimensions and underlying mechanisms of lineage diversification and pattern of genetic variation of keystone plant taxa in warm-temperate forests of Sino-Japanese Floristic Region?; grant no. 4-1403), the TAKARA Harmonist Fund, the Nissei Fund, and the Pro Natura Foundation Japan for the Ashiu Biological Conservation project. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd",
year = "2020",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1111/mec.15324",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
pages = "3234--3247",
journal = "Molecular Ecology",
issn = "0962-1083",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd",
number = "17",
}