4.5 Article

The lack of genetic bottleneck in invasive Tansy ragwort populations suggests multiple source populations.

Journal

BASIC AND APPLIED ECOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages 244-250

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.baae.2009.12.007

Keywords

AFLP; Assignment test; Biological invasion; Multiple introductions; Pyrrolizidine alkaloids; Senecio jacobaea; Source populations

Categories

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation
  2. Socrates/Erasmus exchange program
  3. Funke Foundation for Experimental Plant Sciences

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Jacobaea vulgaris (Asteraceae) is a species of Eurasian origin that has become a serious non-indigenous weed in Australia, New Zealand, and North America. We used neutral molecular markers to (1) test for genetic bottlenecks in invasive populations and (2) to investigate the invasion pathways. It is for the first time that molecular markers were used to unravel the process of introduction in this species. The genetic variation of 15 native populations from Europe and 16 invasive populations from Australia, New Zealand and North America were compared using the amplified fragment length polymorphisms (AFLP's). An analysis of molecular variance showed that a significant part (10%) of the total genetic variations between all individuals could be explained by native or invasive origin. Significant among-population differentiation was detected only in the native range, whereas populations from the invasive areas did not significantly differ from each other; nor did the Australian, New Zealand and North American regions differ within the invasive range. The result that native populations differed significantly from each other and that the amount of genetic variation, measured as the number of polymorphic bands, did not differ between the native and invasive area, strongly suggests that introductions from multiple source populations have occurred. The lack of differentiation between invasive regions suggests that either introductions may have occurred from the same native sources in all invasive regions or subsequent introductions took place from one into another invasive region and the same mix of genotypes was subsequently introduced into all invasive regions. An assignment test showed that European populations from Ireland, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom most resembled the invasive populations. (C) 2010 Gesellschaft fur Okologie. Published by Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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