Author
Listed:
- Wensheng Liu
- Yao Zhao
- Jianling You
- Danhui Qi
- Yin Zhou
- Jiakuan Chen
- Zhiping Song
Abstract
Estimating the potential of species to cope with rapid environmental climatic modifications is of vital importance for determining their future viability and conservation. The variation between existing populations along a climatic gradient may predict how a species will respond to future climate change. Stipa purpurea is a dominant grass species in the alpine steppe and meadow of the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau (QTP). Ecological niche modelling was applied to S. purpurea, and its distribution was found to be most strongly correlated with the annual precipitation and the mean temperature of the warmest quarter. We established a north-to-south transect over 2000 km long on the QTP reflecting the gradients of temperature and precipitation, and then we estimated the morphological by sampling fruited tussocks and genetic divergence by using 11 microsatellite markers between 20 populations along the transect. Reproductive traits (the number of seeds and reproductive shoots), the reproductive-vegetative growth ratio and the length of roots in the S. purpurea populations varied significantly with climate variables. S. purpurea has high genetic diversity (He = 0.585), a large effective population size (Ne >1,000), and a considerable level of gene flow between populations. The S. purpurea populations have a mosaic genetic structure: some distant populations (over 1000 km apart) clustered genetically, whereas closer populations (
Suggested Citation
Wensheng Liu & Yao Zhao & Jianling You & Danhui Qi & Yin Zhou & Jiakuan Chen & Zhiping Song, 2016.
"Morphological and Genetic Variation along a North-to-South Transect in Stipa purpurea, a Dominant Grass on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau: Implications for Response to Climate Change,"
PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 11(8), pages 1-22, August.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pone00:0161972
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0161972
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