4.7 Article

Effects of habitat fragmentation on pollen flow and genetic diversity of the endangered tropical tree Swietenia humilis (Meliaceae)

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
Volume 144, Issue 12, Pages 3082-3088

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2011.10.003

Keywords

Pollen sources; Microsatellires; Tropical dry forest; Neotropical trees

Funding

  1. CONACyT [SEP-CONACyT 2005-C01-51043, 2005-C01 50863, 2009-C01-131008, 91527, 54313]
  2. DGAPA [PAPIIT IN221305, IN224108]
  3. IAI [CRN2-21]
  4. UC MEXUS-CONACyT [FE-09-110]

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Fragmentation of tropical forest represents a major threat to some tree populations by reducing local population size and gene flow from other populations. Both processes can decrease outcrossing rates and genetic variation in remnant stands. Despite these risks, some tree species have pollen vectors that mitigate these negative consequences for fragmented populations. In this paper, we assess both pollen flow and diversity of pollen sources in continuous forest and isolated stands of Swietenia humilis, a tropical tree species pollinated by small insects. Using seven nuclear microsatellite markers, we test the hypothesis that genetic diversity and the number of pollen donors are lower in remnant populations. Results show that allelic richness of seeds is lower in isolated populations (6.1 vs. 8.3 alleles per locus), even though adult populations do not show this difference. Pollen pool structure is greater in isolated patches (Phi(Iso) = 0.26) than in continuous forest (Phi(For) = 0.14), which yields estimates of the average effective number of pollen donors (N-ep) of 1.9 and 3.6 respectively. In addition, estimates of number of sires per mother indicate that isolated trees have half the number of pollen sources (4.98) than trees in the forest (9.8). Although extensive pollen movement (>2000 m) was recorded on both habitat conditions, indicating that fragmented patches are not isolated from pollen-mediated gene flow, this extensive pollen flow among trees in fragmented landscapes may not serve to counteract deleterious reproductive and genetic consequences of habitat fragmentation. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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