Within-population spatial genetic structure in four naturally fragmented species of a neotropical inselberg radiation, Alcantarea imperialis, A. geniculata, A. glaziouana and A. regina (Bromeliaceae)

被引:0
|
作者
T Barbará
C Lexer
G Martinelli
S Mayo
M F Fay
M Heuertz
机构
[1] Jodrell Laboratory,
[2] Royal Botanic Gardens,undefined
[3] Kew,undefined
[4] Instituto de Pesquisas Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro (JBRJ),undefined
[5] Rua Pacheco Leão 915,undefined
[6] Herbarium,undefined
[7] Royal Botanic Gardens,undefined
[8] Kew,undefined
[9] Behavioural and Evolutionary Ecology,undefined
[10] Université Libre de Bruxelles,undefined
来源
Heredity | 2008年 / 101卷
关键词
inselberg; Bromeliaceae; spatial genetic structure; gene dispersal; colour morphs;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Studies of organisms on ‘terrestrial islands’ can improve our understanding of two unresolved issues in evolutionary genetics: the likely long-term effects of habitat fragmentation and the genetic underpinnings of continental species radiations in island-like terrestrial habitats. We have addressed both issues for four closely related plant species of the adaptive radiation Bromeliaceae, Alcantarea imperialis, A. geniculata, A. regina and A. glaziouana. All four are adapted to ancient, isolated inselberg rock outcrops in the Brazilian Atlantic rainforest and are thus long-term fragmented by nature. We used eight nuclear microsatellites to study within-population spatial genetic structure (SGS) and historical gene dispersal in nine populations of these species. Within-population SGS reflected known between-species differences in mating systems. The strongest SGS observed in A. glaziouana (Sp=0.947) was stronger than literature estimates available for plants. Analysis of short- and long-distance components of SGS identified biparental inbreeding, selfing and restricted seed dispersal as main determinants of SGS, with restricted pollen dispersal by bats contributing in some localities. The ability of Alcantarea spp. to colonize isolated inselbergs probably stems from their flexible mating systems and an ability to tolerate inbreeding. Short-ranging gene dispersal (average sigma=7–27 m) is consistent with a loss of dispersal power in terrestrial island habitats. Population subdivision associated with sympatric colour morphs in A. imperialis is accompanied by between-morph differences in pollen and seed dispersal. Our results indicate a high potential for divergence with gene flow in inselberg bromeliads and they provide base-line data about the long-term effects of fragmentation in plants.
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页码:285 / 296
页数:11
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  • [1] Within-population spatial genetic structure in four naturally fragmented species of a neotropical inselberg radiation, Alcantarea imperialis, A-geniculata, A-glaziouana and A-regina (Bromeliaceae)
    Barbara, T.
    Lexer, C.
    Martinelli, G.
    Mayo, S.
    Fay, M. F.
    Heuertz, M.
    HEREDITY, 2008, 101 (03) : 285 - 296
  • [2] Genetic relationships and variation in reproductive strategies in four closely related bromeliads adapted to neotropical 'inselbergs': Alcantarea glaziouana, A-regina, A-geniculata and A-imperialis (Bromeliaceae)
    Barbara, Thelma
    Martinelli, Gustavo
    Palma-Silva, Clarisse
    Fay, Michael F.
    Mayo, Simon
    Lexer, Christian
    ANNALS OF BOTANY, 2009, 103 (01) : 65 - 77