Population Genetic Diversity of Quercus ilex subsp. ballota (Desf.) Samp. Reveals Divergence in Recent and Evolutionary Migration Rates in the Spanish Dehesas

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Author
Fernández i Marti, Ángel
Romero-Rodríguez, M. Cristina
Navarro Cerrillo, Rafael M.
Abril, Nieves
Jorrín-Novo, Jesús V.
Dodd, Richard S.
Publisher
MDPIDate
2018Subject
Quercus ilexDehesas
Population structure
Genetic divergence
Gene flow
nSSR
cpSSR
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The Spanish dehesas have been severely affected by human activities that date to the
prehistoric period and have suffered accelerated decline since the 1980s. Holm oak (Quercus ilex
subsp. ballota (Desf.) Samp.) is a key component of this system, and its acorns provide an important
food source for wildlife and domesticated livestock. Our earlier work showed structured variation
in acorn morphology and biochemistry. Here, we used chloroplast and nuclear microsatellites
to detect genetic structure among populations of Q. ilex from the major biogeographic regions of
Andalusia. We found high levels of spatial differentiation with chloroplast DNA indicating little
seed dispersal among populations. Spatial differentiation was weaker for nuclear DNA, presumably
as a result of more widespread pollen dispersal and its larger effective population size. The Baetic
Cordillera (Cádiz) population consistently appeared well separated from populations of the northern
Sierra Morena, suggesting that the Guadalquivir Valley has played an important role in determining
population divergence. This may be, in part, evolutionary, as suggested by chloroplast DNA, and,
in part, a result of human-induced population isolation, as Q. ilex has been removed from the
Guadalquivir Valley. Evolutionary gene flow rates were greater than contemporary rates, which were
limited to unidirectional gene flow from Córdoba to other populations in the Sierra Morena and,
surprisingly, to the southern population at Almería. The inconsistency between evolutionary and
recent migration rates suggests an effect of anthropogenic activity over the last few generations of
Q. ilex.