The results of a molecular genetic study of agg. using two plastid markers ( and ) and a nuclear ITS marker suggested that this group comprises a number of relatively young and incompletely differentiated species widely distributed in Northern Eurasia. The sequences were analyzed using tree-based (maximum likelihood) and network-based (statistical parsimony network) approaches. The plastid data suggested incomplete lineage sorting, characteristic of the group as a whole. The nuclear ITS results demonstrated quite a different pattern, with mostly conspecific accessions shaping monophyletic clades. The majority of the sect. species studied possess few, usually closely related plastid haplotypes, or are even monomorphic. In contrast, , a narrow endemic from the Volga River valley, presents plastid haplotypes belonging to two distantly related groups. Such a pattern of genetic diversity in may be explained by a long persistence of the species within an extremely small distribution range, on the right bank of the Volga River, most likely representing a contemporary refugium. The genealogy of plastid markers in suggests that this species is ancestral to another narrow endemic from the S Urals.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7766615PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants9121798DOI Listing

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