Taxonomic status and spatial genetic pattern of Taxus in northern and central China: insights from integrative taxonomy, ecology and phylogeography

Abstract Background Phenotypic, ecological, and genetic differences are crucial for species delimitation and understanding speciation. However, the defining the distribution boundaries and mechanisms driving lineage differentiation of Taxus species in northern and central China remain unclear. This...

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Main Authors: Chuncheng Wang, Minqiu Wang, Shaolong Yang, Xintong Wu, Shanshan Zhu, Yadan Yan, Jing Xu, Yafeng Wen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-02-01
Series:BMC Plant Biology
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-025-06142-4
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author Chuncheng Wang
Minqiu Wang
Shaolong Yang
Xintong Wu
Shanshan Zhu
Yadan Yan
Jing Xu
Yafeng Wen
author_facet Chuncheng Wang
Minqiu Wang
Shaolong Yang
Xintong Wu
Shanshan Zhu
Yadan Yan
Jing Xu
Yafeng Wen
author_sort Chuncheng Wang
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Phenotypic, ecological, and genetic differences are crucial for species delimitation and understanding speciation. However, the defining the distribution boundaries and mechanisms driving lineage differentiation of Taxus species in northern and central China remain unclear. This study combines three molecular markers (trnL-trnF, rbcL, ITS), leaf morphological, and ecological data, integrating multiple taxonomy, ecology, and phylogeography approaches to systematically investigate the taxonomic status and spatial genetic patterns of Taxus species in these regions. Results A total of 177 samples from 27 populations, representing the natural distribution of Taxus in central and northern China, were collected. T. chinensis (TC) mainly occurs from 1000–2400 m in the south of Qinling Mountains, T. mairei (TM) from 100–1000 m in the south of Daba Mountains, and T. qinlingensis (TQ) from 900–1800 m in the north of Qinling Mountains. The three species overlap in the central Qinling, eastern Daba, and Wushan Mountains at elevations of 900–1800 m. Seventeen haplotypes and 21 ribotypes were identified, forming three clusters corresponding to TC, TM, and TQ. Both cpDNA and nDNA data reveals distinct phylogeographic structures, significant genetic differentiation, and smaller bidirectional gene flow among species. Genetic and niche play a more prominent role in species divergence than morphological traits. Effective population sizes and genetic diversity are higher in TC and TM than in TQ. Suitable habitats expanded southwestward after the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and are projected to shift northwestward and contract under future warming scenarios. Conclusion Geologic movement (rapid uplift of the Qinling and surrounding mountains), climate fluctuations (cold-drying effect, and glacial-interglacial cycles), and habitat heterogeneity (gradients in geography and elevation) together shaped interspecific adaptive differentiation and shifts in population dynamics of the three Taxus species. The Qinling-Daba-Wushan mountain range likely played a key role in the independent evolution of these species in local glacial refugia and their post-glacial recontact at the intersection of these mountain ranges. This study provides new insights into the taxonomic status and genetic variation pattern of Taxus species in central and northern China.
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spelling doaj-art-293d2cfbaae846678b2d58b61a7557f72025-08-20T02:48:27ZengBMCBMC Plant Biology1471-22292025-02-0125112310.1186/s12870-025-06142-4Taxonomic status and spatial genetic pattern of Taxus in northern and central China: insights from integrative taxonomy, ecology and phylogeographyChuncheng Wang0Minqiu Wang1Shaolong Yang2Xintong Wu3Shanshan Zhu4Yadan Yan5Jing Xu6Yafeng Wen7College of Landscape Architecture, College of Landscape Architecture, Central South University of Forestry and TechnologyCollege of Landscape Architecture, College of Landscape Architecture, Central South University of Forestry and TechnologyCollege of Landscape Architecture, College of Landscape Architecture, Central South University of Forestry and TechnologyCollege of Landscape Architecture, College of Landscape Architecture, Central South University of Forestry and TechnologyCollege of Landscape Architecture, College of Landscape Architecture, Central South University of Forestry and TechnologyCollege of Landscape Architecture, College of Landscape Architecture, Central South University of Forestry and TechnologyCollege of Landscape Architecture, College of Landscape Architecture, Central South University of Forestry and TechnologyCollege of Landscape Architecture, College of Landscape Architecture, Central South University of Forestry and TechnologyAbstract Background Phenotypic, ecological, and genetic differences are crucial for species delimitation and understanding speciation. However, the defining the distribution boundaries and mechanisms driving lineage differentiation of Taxus species in northern and central China remain unclear. This study combines three molecular markers (trnL-trnF, rbcL, ITS), leaf morphological, and ecological data, integrating multiple taxonomy, ecology, and phylogeography approaches to systematically investigate the taxonomic status and spatial genetic patterns of Taxus species in these regions. Results A total of 177 samples from 27 populations, representing the natural distribution of Taxus in central and northern China, were collected. T. chinensis (TC) mainly occurs from 1000–2400 m in the south of Qinling Mountains, T. mairei (TM) from 100–1000 m in the south of Daba Mountains, and T. qinlingensis (TQ) from 900–1800 m in the north of Qinling Mountains. The three species overlap in the central Qinling, eastern Daba, and Wushan Mountains at elevations of 900–1800 m. Seventeen haplotypes and 21 ribotypes were identified, forming three clusters corresponding to TC, TM, and TQ. Both cpDNA and nDNA data reveals distinct phylogeographic structures, significant genetic differentiation, and smaller bidirectional gene flow among species. Genetic and niche play a more prominent role in species divergence than morphological traits. Effective population sizes and genetic diversity are higher in TC and TM than in TQ. Suitable habitats expanded southwestward after the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and are projected to shift northwestward and contract under future warming scenarios. Conclusion Geologic movement (rapid uplift of the Qinling and surrounding mountains), climate fluctuations (cold-drying effect, and glacial-interglacial cycles), and habitat heterogeneity (gradients in geography and elevation) together shaped interspecific adaptive differentiation and shifts in population dynamics of the three Taxus species. The Qinling-Daba-Wushan mountain range likely played a key role in the independent evolution of these species in local glacial refugia and their post-glacial recontact at the intersection of these mountain ranges. This study provides new insights into the taxonomic status and genetic variation pattern of Taxus species in central and northern China.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-025-06142-4Distribution boundariesGenetic variation patternInterspecific divergenceDispersal corridorTaxus
spellingShingle Chuncheng Wang
Minqiu Wang
Shaolong Yang
Xintong Wu
Shanshan Zhu
Yadan Yan
Jing Xu
Yafeng Wen
Taxonomic status and spatial genetic pattern of Taxus in northern and central China: insights from integrative taxonomy, ecology and phylogeography
BMC Plant Biology
Distribution boundaries
Genetic variation pattern
Interspecific divergence
Dispersal corridor
Taxus
title Taxonomic status and spatial genetic pattern of Taxus in northern and central China: insights from integrative taxonomy, ecology and phylogeography
title_full Taxonomic status and spatial genetic pattern of Taxus in northern and central China: insights from integrative taxonomy, ecology and phylogeography
title_fullStr Taxonomic status and spatial genetic pattern of Taxus in northern and central China: insights from integrative taxonomy, ecology and phylogeography
title_full_unstemmed Taxonomic status and spatial genetic pattern of Taxus in northern and central China: insights from integrative taxonomy, ecology and phylogeography
title_short Taxonomic status and spatial genetic pattern of Taxus in northern and central China: insights from integrative taxonomy, ecology and phylogeography
title_sort taxonomic status and spatial genetic pattern of taxus in northern and central china insights from integrative taxonomy ecology and phylogeography
topic Distribution boundaries
Genetic variation pattern
Interspecific divergence
Dispersal corridor
Taxus
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-025-06142-4
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