Authors
Boris B Demenou, Jérémy Migliore, Myriam Heuertz, Franck K Monthe, Dario I Ojeda, Jan J Wieringa, Gilles Dauby, Laura Albreht, Arthur Boom, Olivier J Hardy
Publication date
2020/9/1
Journal
Molecular phylogenetics and evolution
Volume
150
Pages
106854
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
Paleo-environmental data show that the distribution of African rain forests was affected by Quaternary climate changes. In particular, the Dahomey Gap (DG) – a 200 km wide savanna corridor currently separating the West African and Central African rain forest blocks and containing relict rain forest fragments – was forested during the mid-Holocene and possibly during previous interglacial periods, whereas it was dominated by open vegetation (savanna) during glacial periods. Genetic signatures of past population fragmentation and demographic changes have been found in some African forest plant species using nuclear markers, but such events appear not to have been synchronous or shared across species. To better understand the colonization history of the DG by rain forest trees through seed dispersal, the plastid genomes of two widespread African forest legume trees, Anthonotha macrophylla and …
Total citations
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