Victorian Alpine Plot Network (Alpine Long Term Monitoring - Community Changes): Multi-taxa Phylogenomic Data, 2012–2013
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资源简介:
Global change poses significant and urgent challenges for biodiversity conservation. Species
persistence under a rapidly changing environment ultimately depends on abilities to disperse
to favourable habitats or adapt in situ by plastic or evolutionary mechanisms. Conservation
strategies preserving endemism and adaptive potential are critical.
This study aims to investigate the phylogeographic history of Victorian Alpine plants
using high-density genetic markers. Multi-taxa genomic data was compared to determine
common phylogeographic patterns and identify evolutionary processes shaping biodiversity.
Spatial patterns of genetic structure were used to delineate evolutionary bioregions and
refugia of high conservation value.
Life-history traits have seldom been explicitly within a landscape genetic framework.
Spatial isolation is a key component of genetic structure for sessile organisms. This study
demonstrates that life-history traits are primary drivers of inter-population connectivity and
genetic structure. Differences across taxa impacted on patterns of genetic structure on fine
spatial scales, while common patterns were observed at broad scales regardless of life-history
traits.
These findings complement other Australian Alpine genetic studies indicate that flora
and fauna in Victorian Alps share a common genetic structure and phylogeographic history
driven by unique processes. The geomorphology of the Victorian Alps has clearly driven the
evolutionary trajectories of the native flora and fauna. This approach could inform evidence
based conservation policy.
Previously undelineated cryptic species were revealed by this study—highlighting
limitations of traditional taxonomy and the utility of new approaches. This project
demonstrates how genomic technologies can characterise evolutionary processes at landscape
scales, and detect important patterns in at-risk ecosystems.
This data is related to the following publication: Bell, N., Griffin, P. C., Hoffmann, A. A., & Miller, A.D. (2018). Spatial patterns of genetic diversity among Australian alpine flora communities revealed by comparative phylogenomics. Journal of Biogeography, 45, 177–189. Published online at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/jbi.13120 (free access). DOI: 10.1111/jbi.13120
提供机构:
Long Term Ecological Research Network



