Multi-Phase US Spread and Habitat Switching of a Post-Columbian Invasive, Sorghum halepense
Johnsongrass (Sorghum halepense) is a striking example of a post-Columbian founder event. This natural experiment within ecological time-scales provides a unique opportunity for understanding patterns of continent-wide genetic diversity following range expansion. Microsatellite markers were used for...
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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
2016
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ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6221192017-01-25T03:00:46Z Multi-Phase US Spread and Habitat Switching of a Post-Columbian Invasive, Sorghum halepense Sezen, U. Uzay Barney, Jacob N. Atwater, Daniel Z. Pederson, Gary A. Pederson, Jeffrey F. Chandler, J. Mike Cox, T. Stan Cox, Sheila Dotray, Peter Kopec, David Smith, Steven E. Schroeder, Jill Wright, Steven D. Jiao, Yuannian Kong, Wenqian Goff, Valorie Auckland, Susan Rainville, Lisa K. Pierce, Gary J. Lemke, Cornelia Compton, Rosana Phillips, Christine Kerr, Alexandra Mettler, Matthew Paterson, Andrew H. Univ Arizona Johnsongrass (Sorghum halepense) is a striking example of a post-Columbian founder event. This natural experiment within ecological time-scales provides a unique opportunity for understanding patterns of continent-wide genetic diversity following range expansion. Microsatellite markers were used for population genetic analyses including leaf-optimized Neighbor-Joining tree, pairwise FST, mismatch analysis, principle coordinate analysis, Tajima's D, Fu's F and Bayesian clusterings of population structure. Evidence indicates two geographically distant introductions of divergent genotypes, which spread across much of the US in <200 years. Based on geophylogeny, gene flow patterns can be inferred to have involved five phases. Centers of genetic diversity have shifted from two introduction sites separated by similar to 2000 miles toward the middle of the range, consistent with admixture between genotypes from the respective introductions. Genotyping provides evidence for a 'habitat switch' from agricultural to non-agricultural systems and may contribute to both Johnsongrass ubiquity and aggressiveness. Despite lower and more structured diversity at the invasion front, Johnsongrass continues to advance northward into cooler and drier habitats. Association genetic approaches may permit identification of alleles contributing to the habitat switch or other traits important to weed/invasive management and/or crop improvement. 2016-10-18 Article Multi-Phase US Spread and Habitat Switching of a Post-Columbian Invasive, Sorghum halepense 2016, 11 (10):e0164584 PLOS ONE 1932-6203 27755565 10.1371/journal.pone.0164584 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/622119 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/622119 PLOS ONE en http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164584 This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication. PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE |
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language |
en |
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description |
Johnsongrass (Sorghum halepense) is a striking example of a post-Columbian founder event. This natural experiment within ecological time-scales provides a unique opportunity for understanding patterns of continent-wide genetic diversity following range expansion. Microsatellite markers were used for population genetic analyses including leaf-optimized Neighbor-Joining tree, pairwise FST, mismatch analysis, principle coordinate analysis, Tajima's D, Fu's F and Bayesian clusterings of population structure. Evidence indicates two geographically distant introductions of divergent genotypes, which spread across much of the US in <200 years. Based on geophylogeny, gene flow patterns can be inferred to have involved five phases. Centers of genetic diversity have shifted from two introduction sites separated by similar to 2000 miles toward the middle of the range, consistent with admixture between genotypes from the respective introductions. Genotyping provides evidence for a 'habitat switch' from agricultural to non-agricultural systems and may contribute to both Johnsongrass ubiquity and aggressiveness. Despite lower and more structured diversity at the invasion front, Johnsongrass continues to advance northward into cooler and drier habitats. Association genetic approaches may permit identification of alleles contributing to the habitat switch or other traits important to weed/invasive management and/or crop improvement. |
author2 |
Univ Arizona |
author_facet |
Univ Arizona Sezen, U. Uzay Barney, Jacob N. Atwater, Daniel Z. Pederson, Gary A. Pederson, Jeffrey F. Chandler, J. Mike Cox, T. Stan Cox, Sheila Dotray, Peter Kopec, David Smith, Steven E. Schroeder, Jill Wright, Steven D. Jiao, Yuannian Kong, Wenqian Goff, Valorie Auckland, Susan Rainville, Lisa K. Pierce, Gary J. Lemke, Cornelia Compton, Rosana Phillips, Christine Kerr, Alexandra Mettler, Matthew Paterson, Andrew H. |
author |
Sezen, U. Uzay Barney, Jacob N. Atwater, Daniel Z. Pederson, Gary A. Pederson, Jeffrey F. Chandler, J. Mike Cox, T. Stan Cox, Sheila Dotray, Peter Kopec, David Smith, Steven E. Schroeder, Jill Wright, Steven D. Jiao, Yuannian Kong, Wenqian Goff, Valorie Auckland, Susan Rainville, Lisa K. Pierce, Gary J. Lemke, Cornelia Compton, Rosana Phillips, Christine Kerr, Alexandra Mettler, Matthew Paterson, Andrew H. |
spellingShingle |
Sezen, U. Uzay Barney, Jacob N. Atwater, Daniel Z. Pederson, Gary A. Pederson, Jeffrey F. Chandler, J. Mike Cox, T. Stan Cox, Sheila Dotray, Peter Kopec, David Smith, Steven E. Schroeder, Jill Wright, Steven D. Jiao, Yuannian Kong, Wenqian Goff, Valorie Auckland, Susan Rainville, Lisa K. Pierce, Gary J. Lemke, Cornelia Compton, Rosana Phillips, Christine Kerr, Alexandra Mettler, Matthew Paterson, Andrew H. Multi-Phase US Spread and Habitat Switching of a Post-Columbian Invasive, Sorghum halepense |
author_sort |
Sezen, U. Uzay |
title |
Multi-Phase US Spread and Habitat Switching of a Post-Columbian Invasive, Sorghum halepense |
title_short |
Multi-Phase US Spread and Habitat Switching of a Post-Columbian Invasive, Sorghum halepense |
title_full |
Multi-Phase US Spread and Habitat Switching of a Post-Columbian Invasive, Sorghum halepense |
title_fullStr |
Multi-Phase US Spread and Habitat Switching of a Post-Columbian Invasive, Sorghum halepense |
title_full_unstemmed |
Multi-Phase US Spread and Habitat Switching of a Post-Columbian Invasive, Sorghum halepense |
title_sort |
multi-phase us spread and habitat switching of a post-columbian invasive, sorghum halepense |
publisher |
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/622119 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/622119 |
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