Demographic and ecogeographic factors limit wild grapevine spread at the southern edge of its distribution range

Abstract The spatial distribution of plants is constrained by demographic and ecogeographic factors that determine the range and abundance of the species. Wild grapevine (Vitis vinifera ssp. sylvestris) is distributed from Switzerland in the north to Israel in the south. However, little is known abo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Oshrit Rahimi, Noa Ohana‐Levi, Hodaya Brauner, Nimrod Inbar, Sariel Hübner, Elyashiv Drori
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-06-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7519
id doaj-1635114192e94117bbd48452090862b7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1635114192e94117bbd48452090862b72021-06-16T08:36:34ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582021-06-0111116657667110.1002/ece3.7519Demographic and ecogeographic factors limit wild grapevine spread at the southern edge of its distribution rangeOshrit Rahimi0Noa Ohana‐Levi1Hodaya Brauner2Nimrod Inbar3Sariel Hübner4Elyashiv Drori5Department of Chemical Engineering Ariel University Ariel IsraelIndependent Researcher Ashalim IsraelThe Samson Family Grape and Wine Research Center Eastern Regional R&D Center Ariel IsraelDepartment of Civil Engineering Ariel University Ariel IsraelGalilee Research Institute (Migal) Tel‐Hai Academic College Upper Galilee IsraelDepartment of Chemical Engineering Ariel University Ariel IsraelAbstract The spatial distribution of plants is constrained by demographic and ecogeographic factors that determine the range and abundance of the species. Wild grapevine (Vitis vinifera ssp. sylvestris) is distributed from Switzerland in the north to Israel in the south. However, little is known about the ecogeographic constraints of this species and its genetic and phenotypic characteristics, especially at the southern edge of its distribution range in the Levant region. In this study, we explore the population structure of southern Levantine wild grapevines and the correlation between demographic and ecogeographic characteristics. Based on our genetic analysis, the wild grapevine populations in this region can be divided into two major subgroups in accordance with a multivariate spatial and ecogeographical clustering model. The identified subpopulations also differ in morphological traits, mainly leaf hairiness which may imply adaptation to environmental stress. The findings suggest that the Upper Jordan River population was spread to the Sea of Galilee area and that a third smaller subpopulation at the south of the Golan Heights may represent a distinguished gene pool or a recent establishment of a new population. A spatial distribution model indicated that distance to water sources, Normalized difference vegetation index, and precipitation are the main environmental factors constraining V. v. sylvestris distribution at its southern distribution range. These factors in addition to limited gene flow between populations prevent further spread of wild grapevines southwards to semi‐arid regions.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7519ecogeographic constraintsmaxentmultivariate spatial clusteringphenotypic diversitypopulation genetic structurewild grapevine
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oshrit Rahimi
Noa Ohana‐Levi
Hodaya Brauner
Nimrod Inbar
Sariel Hübner
Elyashiv Drori
spellingShingle Oshrit Rahimi
Noa Ohana‐Levi
Hodaya Brauner
Nimrod Inbar
Sariel Hübner
Elyashiv Drori
Demographic and ecogeographic factors limit wild grapevine spread at the southern edge of its distribution range
Ecology and Evolution
ecogeographic constraints
maxent
multivariate spatial clustering
phenotypic diversity
population genetic structure
wild grapevine
author_facet Oshrit Rahimi
Noa Ohana‐Levi
Hodaya Brauner
Nimrod Inbar
Sariel Hübner
Elyashiv Drori
author_sort Oshrit Rahimi
title Demographic and ecogeographic factors limit wild grapevine spread at the southern edge of its distribution range
title_short Demographic and ecogeographic factors limit wild grapevine spread at the southern edge of its distribution range
title_full Demographic and ecogeographic factors limit wild grapevine spread at the southern edge of its distribution range
title_fullStr Demographic and ecogeographic factors limit wild grapevine spread at the southern edge of its distribution range
title_full_unstemmed Demographic and ecogeographic factors limit wild grapevine spread at the southern edge of its distribution range
title_sort demographic and ecogeographic factors limit wild grapevine spread at the southern edge of its distribution range
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Abstract The spatial distribution of plants is constrained by demographic and ecogeographic factors that determine the range and abundance of the species. Wild grapevine (Vitis vinifera ssp. sylvestris) is distributed from Switzerland in the north to Israel in the south. However, little is known about the ecogeographic constraints of this species and its genetic and phenotypic characteristics, especially at the southern edge of its distribution range in the Levant region. In this study, we explore the population structure of southern Levantine wild grapevines and the correlation between demographic and ecogeographic characteristics. Based on our genetic analysis, the wild grapevine populations in this region can be divided into two major subgroups in accordance with a multivariate spatial and ecogeographical clustering model. The identified subpopulations also differ in morphological traits, mainly leaf hairiness which may imply adaptation to environmental stress. The findings suggest that the Upper Jordan River population was spread to the Sea of Galilee area and that a third smaller subpopulation at the south of the Golan Heights may represent a distinguished gene pool or a recent establishment of a new population. A spatial distribution model indicated that distance to water sources, Normalized difference vegetation index, and precipitation are the main environmental factors constraining V. v. sylvestris distribution at its southern distribution range. These factors in addition to limited gene flow between populations prevent further spread of wild grapevines southwards to semi‐arid regions.
topic ecogeographic constraints
maxent
multivariate spatial clustering
phenotypic diversity
population genetic structure
wild grapevine
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7519
work_keys_str_mv AT oshritrahimi demographicandecogeographicfactorslimitwildgrapevinespreadatthesouthernedgeofitsdistributionrange
AT noaohanalevi demographicandecogeographicfactorslimitwildgrapevinespreadatthesouthernedgeofitsdistributionrange
AT hodayabrauner demographicandecogeographicfactorslimitwildgrapevinespreadatthesouthernedgeofitsdistributionrange
AT nimrodinbar demographicandecogeographicfactorslimitwildgrapevinespreadatthesouthernedgeofitsdistributionrange
AT sarielhubner demographicandecogeographicfactorslimitwildgrapevinespreadatthesouthernedgeofitsdistributionrange
AT elyashivdrori demographicandecogeographicfactorslimitwildgrapevinespreadatthesouthernedgeofitsdistributionrange
_version_ 1721375359088197632