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Frequent long-distance plant colonization in the changing Arctic
Authors:Alsos Inger Greve  Eidesen Pernille Bronken  Ehrich Dorothee  Skrede Inger  Westergaard Kristine  Jacobsen Gro Hilde  Landvik Jon Y  Taberlet Pierre  Brochmann Christian
Institution:National Centre for Biosystematics, Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, Post Office Box 1172 Blindern, NO-0318 Oslo, Norway. ingera@unis.no
Abstract:The ability of species to track their ecological niche after climate change is a major source of uncertainty in predicting their future distribution. By analyzing DNA fingerprinting (amplified fragment-length polymorphism) of nine plant species, we show that long-distance colonization of a remote arctic archipelago, Svalbard, has occurred repeatedly and from several source regions. Propagules are likely carried by wind and drifting sea ice. The genetic effect of restricted colonization was strongly correlated with the temperature requirements of the species, indicating that establishment limits distribution more than dispersal. Thus, it may be appropriate to assume unlimited dispersal when predicting long-term range shifts in the Arctic.
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