4.5 Article

Increased inbreeding and strong kinship structure in Taxus baccata estimated from both AFLP and SSR data

Journal

HEREDITY
Volume 107, Issue 6, Pages 589-600

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/hdy.2011.51

Keywords

habitat fragmentation; spatial genetic structure; inbreeding; SSR; AFLP; Taxus baccata

Funding

  1. Polish Ministry of Science and The Higher Education [NN304 4216 33]

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Habitat fragmentation can have severe genetic consequences for trees, such as increased inbreeding and decreased effective population size. In effect, local populations suffer from reduction of genetic variation, and thus loss of adaptive capacity, which consequently increases their risk of extinction. In Europe, Taxus baccata is among a number of tree species experiencing strong habitat fragmentation. However, there is little empirical data on the population genetic consequences of fragmentation for this species. This study aimed to characterize local genetic structure in two natural remnants of English yew in Poland based on both amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) and microsatellite (SSR) markers. We introduced a Bayesian approach that estimates the average inbreeding coefficient using AFLP (dominant) markers. Results showed that, in spite of high dispersal potential (bird-mediated seed dispersal and wind-mediated pollen dispersal), English yew populations show strong kinship structure, with a spatial extent of 50-100 m, depending on the population. The estimated inbreeding levels ranged from 0.016 to 0.063, depending on the population and marker used. Several patterns were evident: (1) AFLP markers showed stronger kinship structure than SSRs; (2) AFLP markers provided higher inbreeding estimates than SSRs; and (3) kinship structure and inbreeding were more pronounced in denser populations regardless of the marker used. Our results suggest that, because both kinship structure and (bi-parental) inbreeding exist in populations of English yew, gene dispersal can be fairly limited in this species. Furthermore, at a local scale, gene dispersal intensity can be more limited in a dense population. Heredity (2011) 107, 589-600; doi:10.1038/hdy.2011.51; published online 29 June 2011

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