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Projekt Druckansicht

Integrating fossil data, vegetation modelling and genetic analyses of modern tree populations to reconstruct the history of Larix in Europe

Fachliche Zuordnung Paläontologie
Förderung Förderung von 2009 bis 2014
Projektkennung Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Projektnummer 162696335
 
Erstellungsjahr 2014

Zusammenfassung der Projektergebnisse

This project focuses on the consequences of past climate and anthropogenic changes on populations of the European larch (Larix decidua Mill.) by integrating palaeoecological and genetic data. Such retrospective approaches provide a useful context for evaluating possible impacts of ongoing changes. A limitation of current studies dealing with forest trees is that they often deal exclusively with postglacial recolonization. Effects of more rapid changes on forests, including those caused by recent plantations or by abrupt climatic events of the last glacial, have been largely neglected. In this study high resolution genetic data and precise vegetation records correlated with high-resolution climate records of the last interglacial/glacial cycle (130,000 years) were used to precisely document longterm and short-term events that impacted the history of European larch. For the genetic analysis, highly informative nuclear markers (microsatellites) and mitochondrial markers (sequence data) were designed and applied on a range-wide sample of 45 modern L. decidua populations. The mitochondrial and nuclear data were analysed independently and in combination to establish a baseline for studies focussing on recent translocations. Results revealed that larch has been planted extensively, generating admixture between native and non-native populations from multiple sources across the range. Translocation events and admixture rates were distributed unevenly across the range, with a particularly high frequency in Poland, Slovakia and the Czech Republic where larch has a more scattered distribution compared to the Alps. Some of the most valuable populations appear to be seriously endangered by translocations. The palaeoecological results showed that larch persisted close to its modern distribution throughout the last interglacial/glacial cycle but that its range was highly dynamic and in equilibrium with both long-term and short-tem climate events, in line with the pioneer character of the species. The extent of species distribution was maximal during the first early Weichselian interstadial when larch built boreal forests in the north-central European lowlands (87,000 – 109,000 years ago). Six to seven Last Glacial refuges were detected using fossils and genetic data. The precision and the richness of details provided by the two approaches can be considered as a new step in reconstructing a species history on the global range scale and provides at the same time a baseline and tools for different research issues (e.g. adaptation, selection, larch canker).

Projektbezogene Publikationen (Auswahl)

 
 

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