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- Title
Resequencing 545 ginkgo genomes across the world reveals the evolutionary history of the living fossil.
- Authors
Zhao, Yun-Peng; Fan, Guangyi; Yin, Ping-Ping; Sun, Shuai; Li, Ning; Hong, Xiaoning; Hu, Gang; Zhang, He; Zhang, Fu-Min; Han, Jing-Dan; Hao, Ya-Jun; Xu, Qiwu; Yang, Xianwei; Xia, Wenjie; Chen, Wenbin; Lin, Han-Yang; Zhang, Rui; Chen, Jiang; Zheng, Xiao-Ming; Lee, Simon Ming-Yuen
- Abstract
As Charles Darwin anticipated, living fossils provide excellent opportunities to study evolutionary questions related to extinction, competition, and adaptation. Ginkgo (Ginkgo biloba L.) is one of the oldest living plants and a fascinating example of how people have saved a species from extinction and assisted its resurgence. By resequencing 545 genomes of ginkgo trees sampled from 51 populations across the world, we identify three refugia in China and detect multiple cycles of population expansion and reduction along with glacial admixture between relict populations in the southwestern and southern refugia. We demonstrate multiple anthropogenic introductions of ginkgo from eastern China into different continents. Further analyses reveal bioclimatic variables that have affected the geographic distribution of ginkgo and the role of natural selection in ginkgo's adaptation and resilience. These investigations provide insights into the evolutionary history of ginkgo trees and valuable genomic resources for further addressing various questions involving living fossil species. Ginkgo is one of the living fossils from the plant kingdom. Here, authors conduct population genomics analyses to reveal its refugia and demographic history, and provide evidence of multiple anthropogenic introductions of ginkgo from eastern China into different continents.
- Subjects
NUCLEOTIDE sequencing; BIOLOGICAL evolution; LIVING fossils; GINKGO; TREE populations
- Publication
Nature Communications, 2019, Vol 10, Issue 1, pN.PAG
- ISSN
2041-1723
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/s41467-019-12133-5