Aim
Pleistocene climate oscillations influenced the species distribution and genetic diversity in grasslands, and such climatic changes promoted expansion and contraction cycles, leading to fragmentation and isolation of evolutionary lineages in refuges. This study aimed to infer the evolutionary processes that most influenced the genetic diversity of a South American nightshade Petunia inhabiting subtropical grasslands under the Pleistocene influence.
Location
Pampa and Chaco.
Taxon
The widely distributed herb Petunia axillaris subsp. parodii (Solanaceae).
Methods
We obtained high‐density genome coverage throughout the geographical distribution of Petunia axillaris subsp. parodii. We estimated the genetic diversity and structure to evaluate population differentiation and applied a model‐based demographic analysis to investigate the scenarios that could have influenced the species' evolutionary history. We evaluated the association between neutral and outlier polymorphisms with environmental variables to distinguish the influence of the geographical distance and environmental differences between populations.
Results
There are three evolutionary lineages in P. axillaris subsp. parodii. The origin and differentiation of these lineages were related to the Pleistocene refuges and rivers acting as barriers to gene flow. We also identified 496 outlier loci related to adaptation to environmental conditions.
Main conclusion
The Pleistocene climate changes drove lineage diversification isolated in micro‐refugia. Rivers and changes in their courses may have also acted on the population divergence, serving as barriers to gene flow or even as corridors for species range expansion. These findings contribute to the knowledge of the evolutionary processes that influenced the lineage diversification of South American subtropical grassland species.
Floral syndromes are known by the conserved morphological traits in flowers associated with pollinator attraction, such as corolla shape and color, aroma emission and composition, and rewards, especially the nectar volume and sugar concentration. Here, we employed a phylogenetic approach to investigate sequences of genes enrolled in the biosynthetic pathways responsible for some phenotypes that are attractive to pollinators in Solanaceae genomes. We included genes involved in visible color, UV-light response, scent emission, and nectar production to test the hypothesis that these essential genes have evolved by convergence under pollinator selection. Our results refuted this hypothesis as all four studied genes recovered the species’ phylogenetic relationships, even though some sites were positively selected. We found differences in protein motifs among genera in Solanaceae that were not necessarily associated with the same floral syndrome. Although it has had a crucial role in plant diversification, the plant–pollinator interaction is complex and still needs further investigation, with genes evolving not only under the influence of pollinators, but by the sum of several evolutionary forces along the speciation process in Solanaceae.
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