New study explains moss migration around the globe
A new study on mosses found in the polar regions reveals how several species have migrated around the globe and are even found in their polar opposite.
Mosses are the dominant flora in Antarctica, yet little is known of when and how they got there. The majority of Antarctica’s moss flora (~45 percent of species) has a curious distribution pattern – a pattern with species only occupying regions in the high latitudes of both hemispheres, with no or very small populations at higher elevations in the tropical regions. This non-continuous distribution pattern has puzzled scientists, including biologists such as Darwin and Wallace, since the 19th century.
A recent large-scale genetic study by researchers from British Antarctic Survey (BAS), the University of Cambridge, and the University of Helsinki and Turku in Finland investigated the origin of the ‘bipolar’ distribution pattern in four common moss species. The study of over 250 samples finds that the driver of these bipolar patterns is long-distance dispersal. This is the likely result of a spore or other reproductive plant part crossing the equator, either via winds or animals e.g. migratory birds.
Lead author Dr. Elisabeth Biersma from BAS says: ‘It’s amazing to think of how well-dispersed some of these plants are. We always thought it was virtually impossible for these plants to cross the Equator, but we see that they have and successfully colonised in new areas’.
Polytrichaceae mosses in the Scottish countryside – these mosses occur across the temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere, but are also present in the outer ends of the Southern Hemisphere. Credit: British Antarctic Survey
Nevertheless, the study found that such inter-hemispheric dispersals are rare events, occurring on multimillion-year time scales, also illustrating the difficulties for plants to make such long journeys.
North to south, or south to north?
Three out of the four species that were studied moved from the north to the south, however, one species, currently a particularly common species in the Holarctic (Polytrichum juniperinum), showed the opposite pattern. Even though the main distribution of P. juniperinum is currently in the Northern Hemisphere, the analyses suggest the moss originated in the Antarctic region (Antarctic, sub-Antarctic and southern South America), and from here colonised both the entire boreal regions of the Northern Hemisphere, as well as other Southern Hemisphere regions such as Australasia and South Africa. The team used molecular genetic techniques to identify the species provenance.
‘You might have noticed the lovely star-like shape of Polytrichum juniperinum on a walk outside in the British countryside,’ adds Dr Biersma. ‘Well, next time you see one you may realise you’re actually looking at a migrant from the other end of the world, which has only colonised the boreal regions in the last couple of thousand to million years!’
The world map represents the present-day distribution of P. juniperinum. All migrations happened from the Antarctic region (blue), from where the plant colonised both the entire boreal regions of the Northern Hemisphere (red), as well as other Southern Hemisphere regions such as Australasia (turquoise), South Africa (yellow) and mountainous region in northern/central South America (green). The southward arrow represents a recent dispersal event from the Northern Hemisphere back to the Antarctic region. Credit: British Antarctic Survey
Polytrichum juniperinum also has some small populations in mountainous regions of northern South America, which could have acted as cold habitat stepping-stones to get from one hemisphere to the other across the equator. However, the study found this was not the case, and that these populations were in fact derived from a separate dispersal event from the south.
Global biogeography of the bipolar moss Polytrichum juniperinum reveals its origin in the far south of the Southern Hemisphere. The world map represents the present-day distribution of P. juniperinum.
Persistence in Southern Hemisphere glaciated regions
The study also found that all mosses had been present in the far south (Antarctic or southern South America) well before the Last Glacial Maximum (18-20 kya) and previous glaciations. These regions are thought to have experienced extensive glaciations throughout these glacial cycles, complicating survival for these plants. The findings of this study suggest that plants must have been present here, despite the harsh conditions throughout these glacial periods.
Polytrichaceae mosses in the Scottish countryside – these mosses occur across the temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere, but are also present in the outer ends of the Southern Hemisphere.
Read more at Phys.org