Santolina semidentata, a plant species endemic to the northwestern Iberian Peninsula and protected by the Habitats Directive of the European Union, is able to grow in soils with very different characteristics thanks to its great ecological adaptability.
This project incorporates new techniques to resolve taxonomic conflicts in this species, while studying the effect of climate change in an area of biogeographic transition between the Atlantic and the Mediterranean. The risk of displacement, either by substitution or introgression, by phylogenetically close species better adapted to drier climates is a problem faced by many plant species. Studies of the ecological niche and relationship with the substrate allow the identification of relevant areas for the future conservation of this species.
The general objective of the project is the application of new methodologies in the resolution of taxonomic conflicts in threatened flora, the study of the effect of climate change and the identification of relevant areas for conservation. Taking Santolina semidentata, a species included in Annex II of the Habitat Directive, as a model species, its relationship with the threatened species Santolina melidensis will be clarified and the risk of hybridization with Santolina rosmarinifolia will be analyzed.
It has these specific goals:
Santolina semidentata’, a Habitats Directive species in regression. Application of novel tools for conflict resolution, management and monitoring (SantolinaEvolClim)