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Isolation of Metrosideros (ʻOhiʻa) Taxa on Oʻahu Increases with Elevation and Extreme Environments

Authors :
Heaven Tharp
Tomoko Sakishima
Neil Snow
Elizabeth A. Stacy
Source :
Journal of Heredity. 111:103-118
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2019.

Abstract

Species radiations should be facilitated by short generation times and limited dispersal among discontinuous populations. Hawaii’s hyper-diverse, landscape-dominant tree, Metrosideros, is unique among the islands’ radiations for its massive populations that occur continuously over space and time within islands, its exceptional capacity for gene flow by both pollen and seed, and its extended life span (ca. >650 years). Metrosideros shows the greatest phenotypic and microsatellite DNA diversity on Oʻahu, where taxa occur in tight sympatry or parapatry in mesic and montane wet forest on 2 volcanoes. We document the nonrandom distributions of 12 taxa (including unnamed morphotypes) along elevation gradients, measure phenotypes of ~6-year-old common-garden plants of 8 taxa to verify heritability of phenotypes, and examine genotypes of 476 wild adults at 9 microsatellite loci to compare the strengths of isolation across taxa, volcanoes, and distance. All 8 taxa retained their diagnostic phenotypes in the common garden. Populations were isolated by taxon to a range of degrees (pairwise FST between taxa: 0.004–0.267), and there was no pattern of isolation by distance or by elevation; however, significant isolation between volcanoes was observed within monotypic species, suggesting limited gene flow between volcanoes. Among the infraspecific taxa of Metrosideros polymorpha, genetic diversity and isolation significantly decreased and increased, respectively, with elevation. Overall, 5 of the 6 most isolated taxa were associated with highest elevations or otherwise extreme environments. These findings suggest a principal role for selection in the origin and maintenance of the exceptional diversity that occurs within continuous Metrosideros stands on Oʻahu.

Details

ISSN :
14657333 and 00221503
Volume :
111
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Heredity
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....736f04c2ca0430647db45193d5454e3a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jhered/esz069