4.7 Article

Forest cover at landscape scales increases male and female gametic diversity of palm seedlings

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 18, Pages 4353-4367

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16060

Keywords

alpha; beta and gamma diversity; conservation genetics; effective population size; genetic diversity; seed and pollen dispersal

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation: GRFP
  2. Disney Conservation Fund
  3. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service [6318]
  4. Tulane University Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
  5. Conservation, Food and Health Foundation
  6. Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
  7. National Geographic Society
  8. National Science Foundation [1548548]
  9. American Philosophical Society
  10. Division Of Environmental Biology
  11. Direct For Biological Sciences [1548548] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The study reveals that forest cover is positively associated with both male and female gametic diversity at a landscape scale, and that stronger fine-scale spatial genetic structure is observed for female gametes compared to male gametes in sites with low forest cover.
Genetic diversity shapes the evolutionary potential of plant populations. For outcrossing plants, genetic diversity is influenced by effective population size and by dispersal, first of paternal gametes through pollen, and then of paternal and maternal gametes through seeds. Forest loss often reduces genetic diversity, but the degree to which it differentially impacts the paternal and maternal contributions to genetic diversity and the spatial scale at which these impacts are most pronounced are poorly understood. To address these questions, we genotyped 504 seedlings of the animal-dispersed palm Oenocarpus bataua collected from 29 widely distributed sites across Ecuador and decomposed the contribution of paternal and maternal gametes to overall genetic diversity. The amount of forest cover at a landscape scale (>10 km radius) had an equally significant positive association with both male and female gametic diversity. In addition, there was a significant positive association between forest cover and effective population size. Stronger fine-scale spatial genetic structure for female versus male gametes was observed at sites with low forest cover, but this did not scale up to differences in male versus female gametic diversity. These findings show that reductions in forest cover at spatial scales much larger than those typically evaluated in ecological studies lead to significant, and equivalent, decreases of diversity in both male and female gametes, and that this association between landscape level forest loss and genetic diversity may be driven directly by reductions in effective population size of O. bataua, rather than by indirect disruptions to local dispersal processes.

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