# High effects of climate oscillations on population diversity and structure of endangered Myricaria laxiflora

**Authors:** Hao Li, Guiyun Huang, Liwen Qiu, Jihong Liu, Yinhua Guo

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2024.1338711 · Frontiers in Plant Science · 2024-02-28

## TL;DR

This study explores how climate changes and water level fluctuations impact the genetic diversity and structure of an endangered shrub in China's Three Gorges Reservoir area.

## Contribution

The study reveals how climate oscillations and human-induced environmental changes have shaped the genetic differentiation and population structure of Myricaria laxiflora.

## Key findings

- Six populations of Myricaria laxiflora are genetically divided into upstream and downstream groups.
- Climate shifts and water level changes have caused habitat fragmentation and limited gene flow.
- Nuclear gene haplotypes can help differentiate populations and guide conservation efforts.

## Abstract

Exploring the effects of climate oscillations on the population diversity and structure of endangered organisms in the Three Gorges Reservoir (TGR) area is essential for hydrological environment changes on endangered organism evolution. Myricaria laxiflora is an endemic and endangered shrub restricted to the TGR along the banks of Yangtze River, China. Recently, six natural populations of this species were newly found upstream and downstream of the TGR, whose habitats have been dramatically changed by the summer flooding regulated by large dams. To study the water level fluctuations and climatic shifts on the genetic diversity and genetic differentiation of the six natural populations, 303 individuals from six populations were analyzed based on one nuclear DNA (ITS) and four chloroplast fragments (trnL-F, psbA-trnH, rps16, and rpl16). The phylogenetic tree and significant genetic divergence identified in the cpDNA and ITS with genetic isolation and limited gene flow among regions suggested that the six populations separated well to two groups distributed upstream and downstream. The MaxEnt modeling results indicated that obvious unidirectional eastward migration via Yangtze River gorges watercourse mediated from Last Interglacial to Last Glacial Maximum were showed with the narrow scale distributions of six remnant populations and nine extirpated populations. The initial habitat fragmentation could be triggered by the accumulation of local habitat loss of the impoundment of the TGR during the Present period and might remain stable restoration with bidirectional diffusion in the Future. Divergences among M. laxiflora populations might have been induced by the drastic changes of the external environment and limited seed/pollen dispersal capacity, as the results of long-term ecological adaptability of summer flooding stress. The haplotypes of nuclear gene could be used for population’s differentiation and germplasm protection. This identified gene flow and range dynamics have provided support for the gene-flow and geology hypothesis. It is also crucial for rescuing conservation to understand the impact of environmental dynamics on endangered organism evolution.

## Linked entities

- **Genes:** sycp2 (synaptonemal complex protein 2) [NCBI Gene 557000], RPS16 (ribosomal protein S16) [NCBI Gene 6217], rpl16 (ribosomal protein L16) [NCBI Gene 800286]
- **Species:** Myricaria laxiflora (taxon 223224)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** TRNH (tRNA-His) [NCBI Gene 4564] {aka MTTH}, RPS16 (ribosomal protein S16) [NCBI Gene 6217] {aka S16, uS9}
- **Species:** Myricaria laxiflora (species) [taxon 223224]

## Full text

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## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10933041/full.md

## References

63 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10933041/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10933041