Context matters: the landscape matrix determines the population genetic structure of temperate forest herbs across Europe

Archive ouverte

Naaf, Tobias | Feigs, Jannis Till | Huang, Siyu | Brunet, Jörg | Cousins, Sara | Decocq, Guillaume | de Frenne, Pieter | Diekmann, Martin | Govaert, Sanne | Hedwall, Per-Ola | Lenoir, Jonathan, Roger Michel Henri | Liira, Jaan | Meeussen, Camille | Plue, Jan | Vangansbeke, Pieter | Vanneste, Thomas | Verheyen, Kris | Holzhauer, Stephanie | Kramp, Katja

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag -

International audience. Abstract Context Plant populations in agricultural landscapes are mostly fragmented and their functional connectivity often depends on seed and pollen dispersal by animals. However, little is known about how the interactions of seed and pollen dispersers with the agricultural matrix translate into gene flow among plant populations. Objectives We aimed to identify effects of the landscape structure on the genetic diversity within, and the genetic differentiation among, spatially isolated populations of three temperate forest herbs. We asked, whether different arable crops have different effects, and whether the orientation of linear landscape elements relative to the gene dispersal direction matters. Methods We analysed the species’ population genetic structures in seven agricultural landscapes across temperate Europe using microsatellite markers. These were modelled as a function of landscape composition and configuration, which we quantified in buffer zones around, and in rectangular landscape strips between, plant populations. Results Landscape effects were diverse and often contrasting between species, reflecting their association with different pollen- or seed dispersal vectors. Differentiating crop types rather than lumping them together yielded higher proportions of explained variation. Some linear landscape elements had both a channelling and hampering effect on gene flow, depending on their orientation. Conclusions Landscape structure is a more important determinant of the species’ population genetic structure than habitat loss and fragmentation per se. Landscape planning with the aim to enhance the functional connectivity among spatially isolated plant populations should consider that even species of the same ecological guild might show distinct responses to the landscape structure.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Sensitivity to habitat fragmentation across European landscapes in three temperate forest herbs

Archive ouverte | Naaf, Tobias | CCSD

International audience. Abstract Context Evidence for effects of habitat loss and fragmentation on the viability of temperate forest herb populations in agricultural landscapes is so far based on population genetic ...

Plant diversity in hedgerows and road verges across Europe

Archive ouverte | Vanneste, Thomas | CCSD

International audience. Linear landscape elements such as hedgerows and road verges have the potential to mitigate the adverse effects of habitat fragmentation and climate change on species, for instance, by serving...

Contrasting microclimates among hedgerows and woodlands across temperate Europe

Archive ouverte | Vanneste, Thomas | CCSD

International audience. Hedgerows have the potential to facilitate the persistence and migration of species across landscapes, mostly due to benign microclimatic conditions. This thermal buffering function may becom...

Chargement des enrichissements...