Historical and contemporary mating patterns in remnant populations of the forest tree Fraxinus excelsior L.


Autoria(s): Bacles, Cecile F. E.; Burczyk, J.; Lowe, Andrew J.; Ennos, R. A.
Contribuinte(s)

D.M. Waller

Data(s)

01/05/2005

Resumo

Genetic variation at microsatellite markers was used to quantify genetic structure and mating behavior in a severely fragmented population of the wind-pollinated, wind-dispersed temperate tree Fraxinus excelsior in a deforested catchment in Scotland. Remnants maintain high levels of genetic diversity, comparable with those reported for continuous populations in southeastern Europe, and show low interpopulation differentiation (Theta = 0.080), indicating that historical gene exchange has not been limited (Nm = 3.48). We estimated from seeds collected from all trees producing fruits in three of five remnants that F. excelsior is predominantly outcrossing (t(m). = 0.971 +/- 0.028). Use of a neighborhood model approach to describe the relative contribution of local and long-distance pollen dispersal indicates that pollen gene flow into each of the three remnants is extensive (46-95%) and pollen dispersal has two components. The first is very localized and restricted to tens of meters around the mother trees. The second is a long-distance component with dispersal occurring over several kilometers. Effective dispersal distances, accounting for the distance and directionality to mother trees of sampled pollen donors, average 328 m and are greater than values reported for a continuous population. These results suggest that the opening of the landscape facilitates airborne pollen movement and may alleviate the expected detrimental genetic effects of fragmentation.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:74760

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Society for the Study of Evolution

Palavras-Chave #Ecology #Evolutionary Biology #Genetics & Heredity #Effective Pollen Dispersal #Fragmented Landscape #Fraxinus Excelsior L. #F-statistics #Microsatellites #Neighborhood Model #Common Ash #Genetic-structure #Pollen Dispersal #Fragmented Populations #Habitat Fragmentation #Plant-populations #Acer-saccharum #Flow #Differentiation #Alleles #C1 #270203 Population and Ecological Genetics #770706 Remnant vegetation and protected conservation areas #0603 Evolutionary Biology
Tipo

Journal Article