Boreal and cool temperate forests are the major land cover of northern Eurasia, and information about continental-scale genetic structure and past demographic history of forest species is important from an evolutionary perspective and has conservation implications. However, although many population genetic studies of forest tree species have been conducted in Europe or Eastern Asia, continental-scale genetic structure and past demographic history remain poorly known. Here, we focus on the birch genus Betula, which is commonly distributed in boreal and cool temperate forests, and examine 129 populations of two tetraploid and four diploid species collected from Iceland to Japan. All individuals were genotyped at seven to 18 nuclear simple seq...
Hybridization may lead to introgression of genes among species. Introgression may be bidirectional o...
The great difference in the level of chloroplast variation and its geographic structure among the th...
<p>Hybridisation may lead to introgression of genes among species. Introgression may be bidirectiona...
Boreal and cool temperate forests are the major land cover of northern Eurasia, and information abou...
Conservation of the local genetic variation and evolutionary integrity of economically and ecologica...
Birches (Betula spp.) hybridize readily, confounding genetic signatures of refugial isolation and po...
Background and Aims Differences in local abundance and ploidy level are predicted ...
Extensive chloroplast introgression has been documented in polyploid Betula species of eastern North...
Past reproductive interactions among incompletely isolated species may leave behind a trail of intro...
Boreal forests are particularly vulnerable to climate change, experiencing a much more drastic incre...
The current geographic distribution and genetic structure of plant species have been greatly affecte...
We present preliminary results of the trnL-trnF cpDNA region analysis for some representatives of th...
Past reproductive interactions among incompletely isolated species may leave behind a trail of intro...
The natural range of the dwarf birch (Betula nana L.) includes the boreal, subarctic and arctic regi...
Boreal species were repeatedly exposed to ice ages and went through cycles of contraction and expans...
Hybridization may lead to introgression of genes among species. Introgression may be bidirectional o...
The great difference in the level of chloroplast variation and its geographic structure among the th...
<p>Hybridisation may lead to introgression of genes among species. Introgression may be bidirectiona...
Boreal and cool temperate forests are the major land cover of northern Eurasia, and information abou...
Conservation of the local genetic variation and evolutionary integrity of economically and ecologica...
Birches (Betula spp.) hybridize readily, confounding genetic signatures of refugial isolation and po...
Background and Aims Differences in local abundance and ploidy level are predicted ...
Extensive chloroplast introgression has been documented in polyploid Betula species of eastern North...
Past reproductive interactions among incompletely isolated species may leave behind a trail of intro...
Boreal forests are particularly vulnerable to climate change, experiencing a much more drastic incre...
The current geographic distribution and genetic structure of plant species have been greatly affecte...
We present preliminary results of the trnL-trnF cpDNA region analysis for some representatives of th...
Past reproductive interactions among incompletely isolated species may leave behind a trail of intro...
The natural range of the dwarf birch (Betula nana L.) includes the boreal, subarctic and arctic regi...
Boreal species were repeatedly exposed to ice ages and went through cycles of contraction and expans...
Hybridization may lead to introgression of genes among species. Introgression may be bidirectional o...
The great difference in the level of chloroplast variation and its geographic structure among the th...
<p>Hybridisation may lead to introgression of genes among species. Introgression may be bidirectiona...