Authors
S‐L Tapper, Margaret Byrne, CJ Yates, Gunnar Keppel, SD Hopper, Kimberly Van Niel, AGT Schut, Ladislav Mucina, GW Wardell‐Johnson
Publication date
2014/9
Journal
Diversity and Distributions
Volume
20
Issue
9
Pages
987-1001
Description
Aim
Granite outcrops are prominent throughout the world and harbour many endemic species. Their topographic complexity and range of environments have led to the hypothesis that they act as refugia facilitating the persistence of species through climate change. We evaluate this hypothesis by investigating the phylogeographic patterns in a common granite endemic shrub.
Location
Granite outcrops of the Southwest Australian Floristic Region.
Methods
Chloroplast haplotypes of 89 Kunzea pulchella individuals from 16 granite outcrops were determined from sequences of three chloroplast intergenic spacer regions. Phylogenetic reconstruction and divergence dating was inferred using Bayesian and Parsimony analyses and phylogenetic relationships between haplotypes were examined in relation to geographic distributions. Nuclear diversity and differentiation of populations were assessed through analysis …
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Scholar articles