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Differentiation and Taxonomic Identification of Roburoid Oaks in the Caucasian and Crimean Regions Using Nuclear Microsatellite Markers
The inter- and intra-specific structure of genetic variability was studied using 18 microsatellite loci (nSSRs) in closely related roburoid white oaks in the Crimean-Caucasian region. The seven most widespread Quercus taxa in the region were studied in 29 morphologically pure populations from differ...
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Published in: | Russian journal of genetics 2024-08, Vol.60 (8), p.1022-1039 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites |
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Summary: | The inter- and intra-specific structure of genetic variability was studied using 18 microsatellite loci (nSSRs) in closely related roburoid white oaks in the Crimean-Caucasian region. The seven most widespread
Quercus
taxa in the region were studied in 29 morphologically pure populations from different parts of the North Caucasus, Transcaucasia, Crimea and northeastern Europe. Most taxa were studied using nSSR markers for the first time. Among the 492 trees studied, Bayesian clustering method implemented in STRUCTURE identified clusters corresponding to the pedunculate oak
Quercus robur
, the Hartwiss oak
Q. hartwissiana
, the Caucasian oak
Q. macranthera
, the downy oak
Q. pubescens
and three subspecies of sessile oak:
Q
.
petraea
ssp.
petraea
,
Q. petraea
ssp
. iberica
,
Q. petraea
ssp.
medwediewii
. Geographic structure was identified within
Q. robur
,
Q. pubescens
and
Q. p
. ssp.
petraea
. The 18 nSSR loci used are efficient in the taxonomic assignment of individuals, and identifying hybrids. The close relationship between the “long-peduncle” roburoid oaks (
Q. robur
and
Q. hartwissiana
) is shown, with a greater difference from other species. For one of the subspecies of sessile oak, widespread in the North Caucasus and Crimea
Q. petraea
ssp.
medwediewii
(syn.
Q. calcarea
), or limestone oak, significant differences from other taxa were found, reaching the inter-species level. The assumption of a possible hybrid origin of this taxon as a result of hybridization of
Q. petraea
and
Q. pubescens
is not confirmed by genetic analysis. The other two subspecies of
Q. petraea
(
Q. p.
ssp.
petraea
and Georgian durmast oak
Q. p.
ssp.
iberica
) are differentiated to a lesser extent and are related to each other, which confirms the legitimacy of distinguishing two geographically isolated taxa at the rank of subspecies. The highest variability was observed in
Q. pubescens
(
H
e
= 0.777). In
Q. p.
ssp.
medwediewii
variability was lower than in other widespread taxa (
H
e
= 0.652), and was approximately at the level of variability of
Q. hartwissiana
(
H
e
= 0.633) and
Q. macranthera
(
H
e
= 0.659). Clear differentiation of taxa by nuclear markers shows the limited introgression in closely related oak species in the Caucasus and Crimea. The identified genetic clusters can be used as reference groups for further population genetic studies of oaks in the Crimean-Caucasian region. |
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ISSN: | 1022-7954 1608-3369 |
DOI: | 10.1134/S1022795424700492 |