Data from: Resolving the Northern Hemisphere source region for the long-distance dispersal event that gave rise to the South American endemic dung moss Tetraplodon fuegianus

Premise of the study—American bipolar plant distributions characterize taxa at various taxonomic ranks but are most common in the bryophytes at infraspecific and infrageneric levels. A previous study on the bipolar disjunction in the dung moss genus Tetraplodon found that direct long-distance disper...

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Main Authors: Lewis, Lily, Biersma, Elisabeth M., Carey, Sarah B., Holsinger, Kent, McDaniel, Stuart F., Rozzi, Ricardo, Goffinet, Bernard, Lewis, Lily R.
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2018
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.2cs4v
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:50|dedup_wf_001::30cbb32a36e6526f9afd889749bfe6aa 2023-05-15T13:38:12+02:00 Data from: Resolving the Northern Hemisphere source region for the long-distance dispersal event that gave rise to the South American endemic dung moss Tetraplodon fuegianus Lewis, Lily Biersma, Elisabeth M. Carey, Sarah B. Holsinger, Kent McDaniel, Stuart F. Rozzi, Ricardo Goffinet, Bernard Lewis, Lily R. 2018-10-18 https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.2cs4v en eng Dryad http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.2cs4v https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.2cs4v lic_creative-commons 10.5061/dryad.2cs4v oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:102286 oai:services.nod.dans.knaw.nl:Products/dans:oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:102286 10|openaire____::9e3be59865b2c1c335d32dae2fe7b254 10|re3data_____::94816e6421eeb072e7742ce6a9decc5f re3data_____::r3d100000044 10|re3data_____::84e123776089ce3c7a33db98d9cd15a8 10|eurocrisdris::fe4903425d9040f680d8610d9079ea14 10|openaire____::081b82f96300b6a6e3d282bad31cb6e2 Splachnaceae Amphitropical Bryopsida long-distance dispersal bryophyte lichen Miocene - Pleistocene RADseq Global Northwestern North America South America Magellanic sub-Antarctic ecoregion Life sciences medicine and health care envir geo Dataset https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_ddb1/ 2018 fttriple https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.2cs4v 2023-01-22T19:12:53Z Premise of the study—American bipolar plant distributions characterize taxa at various taxonomic ranks but are most common in the bryophytes at infraspecific and infrageneric levels. A previous study on the bipolar disjunction in the dung moss genus Tetraplodon found that direct long-distance dispersal from North to South in the Miocene - Pleistocene accounted for the origin of the Southern American endemic Tetraplodon fuegianus, congruent with other molecular studies on bipolar bryophytes. The previous study, however, remained inconclusive regarding a specific Northern Hemisphere source region for the trans-equatorial dispersal event that gave rise to T. fuegianus. Methods—To estimate spatial genetic structure and phylogeographic relationships within the bipolar lineage of Tetraplodon, which includes T. fuegianus, we analyzed thousands of Restriction-site Associated DNA (RADseq) loci and single nucleotide polymorphisms using Bayesian individual assignment and maximum likelihood and coalescent model based phylogenetic approaches. Key results—Northwestern North America is the most likely source of the recent ancestor to T. fuegianus. Conclusions—Tetraplodon fuegianus, which marks the southernmost populations in the bipolar lineage of Tetraplodon, arose following a single long-distance dispersal event involving a T. mnioides lineage that is now rare in the Northern Hemisphere and potentially restricted to the Pacific Northwest region of North America. Furthermore, gene flow between sympatric lineages of Tetraplodon mnioides in the Northern Hemisphere is limited, possibly due to high rates of selfing or reproductive isolation. Aligned supermatrices & SNP matricesAdd data sets referred to in Table 1 and Table 2 are included. Supermatrices are in nexus format and unlinked SNP files are in .str format, and include sample assignment information based on RAxML analyses (see Figure 1). Sample assignment information should not be used to inform STRUCTURE analyses however, but to help with graphical display and order ... Dataset Antarc* Antarctic Unknown Antarctic Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic Splachnaceae
Amphitropical
Bryopsida
long-distance dispersal
bryophyte
lichen
Miocene - Pleistocene
RADseq
Global
Northwestern North America
South America
Magellanic sub-Antarctic ecoregion
Life sciences
medicine and health care
envir
geo
spellingShingle Splachnaceae
Amphitropical
Bryopsida
long-distance dispersal
bryophyte
lichen
Miocene - Pleistocene
RADseq
Global
Northwestern North America
South America
Magellanic sub-Antarctic ecoregion
Life sciences
medicine and health care
envir
geo
Lewis, Lily
Biersma, Elisabeth M.
Carey, Sarah B.
Holsinger, Kent
McDaniel, Stuart F.
Rozzi, Ricardo
Goffinet, Bernard
Lewis, Lily R.
Data from: Resolving the Northern Hemisphere source region for the long-distance dispersal event that gave rise to the South American endemic dung moss Tetraplodon fuegianus
topic_facet Splachnaceae
Amphitropical
Bryopsida
long-distance dispersal
bryophyte
lichen
Miocene - Pleistocene
RADseq
Global
Northwestern North America
South America
Magellanic sub-Antarctic ecoregion
Life sciences
medicine and health care
envir
geo
description Premise of the study—American bipolar plant distributions characterize taxa at various taxonomic ranks but are most common in the bryophytes at infraspecific and infrageneric levels. A previous study on the bipolar disjunction in the dung moss genus Tetraplodon found that direct long-distance dispersal from North to South in the Miocene - Pleistocene accounted for the origin of the Southern American endemic Tetraplodon fuegianus, congruent with other molecular studies on bipolar bryophytes. The previous study, however, remained inconclusive regarding a specific Northern Hemisphere source region for the trans-equatorial dispersal event that gave rise to T. fuegianus. Methods—To estimate spatial genetic structure and phylogeographic relationships within the bipolar lineage of Tetraplodon, which includes T. fuegianus, we analyzed thousands of Restriction-site Associated DNA (RADseq) loci and single nucleotide polymorphisms using Bayesian individual assignment and maximum likelihood and coalescent model based phylogenetic approaches. Key results—Northwestern North America is the most likely source of the recent ancestor to T. fuegianus. Conclusions—Tetraplodon fuegianus, which marks the southernmost populations in the bipolar lineage of Tetraplodon, arose following a single long-distance dispersal event involving a T. mnioides lineage that is now rare in the Northern Hemisphere and potentially restricted to the Pacific Northwest region of North America. Furthermore, gene flow between sympatric lineages of Tetraplodon mnioides in the Northern Hemisphere is limited, possibly due to high rates of selfing or reproductive isolation. Aligned supermatrices & SNP matricesAdd data sets referred to in Table 1 and Table 2 are included. Supermatrices are in nexus format and unlinked SNP files are in .str format, and include sample assignment information based on RAxML analyses (see Figure 1). Sample assignment information should not be used to inform STRUCTURE analyses however, but to help with graphical display and order ...
format Dataset
author Lewis, Lily
Biersma, Elisabeth M.
Carey, Sarah B.
Holsinger, Kent
McDaniel, Stuart F.
Rozzi, Ricardo
Goffinet, Bernard
Lewis, Lily R.
author_facet Lewis, Lily
Biersma, Elisabeth M.
Carey, Sarah B.
Holsinger, Kent
McDaniel, Stuart F.
Rozzi, Ricardo
Goffinet, Bernard
Lewis, Lily R.
author_sort Lewis, Lily
title Data from: Resolving the Northern Hemisphere source region for the long-distance dispersal event that gave rise to the South American endemic dung moss Tetraplodon fuegianus
title_short Data from: Resolving the Northern Hemisphere source region for the long-distance dispersal event that gave rise to the South American endemic dung moss Tetraplodon fuegianus
title_full Data from: Resolving the Northern Hemisphere source region for the long-distance dispersal event that gave rise to the South American endemic dung moss Tetraplodon fuegianus
title_fullStr Data from: Resolving the Northern Hemisphere source region for the long-distance dispersal event that gave rise to the South American endemic dung moss Tetraplodon fuegianus
title_full_unstemmed Data from: Resolving the Northern Hemisphere source region for the long-distance dispersal event that gave rise to the South American endemic dung moss Tetraplodon fuegianus
title_sort data from: resolving the northern hemisphere source region for the long-distance dispersal event that gave rise to the south american endemic dung moss tetraplodon fuegianus
publisher Dryad
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.2cs4v
geographic Antarctic
Pacific
geographic_facet Antarctic
Pacific
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_source 10.5061/dryad.2cs4v
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10|eurocrisdris::fe4903425d9040f680d8610d9079ea14
10|openaire____::081b82f96300b6a6e3d282bad31cb6e2
op_relation http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.2cs4v
https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.2cs4v
op_rights lic_creative-commons
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.2cs4v
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