4.5 Article

Molecular and quantitative genetic variation within and between populations of the declining grassland species Saxifraga granulata

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ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 12, 期 11, 页码 -

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.9462

关键词

climatic distances; diversifying selection; evolutionary potential; evolvability; formerly common species; genetic drift; heritability; isolation by distance; molecular genetic variation; pairwise Q(st); Q(ST) vs; F-ST; quantitative genetic variation; recent fragmentation; Saxifraga granulata

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This study focused on the population genetics of a plant species in fragmented habitats. The results showed that long-lived clonal species may be buffered against the negative effects of fragmentation. The relationship between quantitative genetic and geographic distance may be a more sensitive indicator of selection than Q(ST)-F-ST differences.
Formerly common plant species are expected to be particularly susceptible to recent habitat fragmentation. We studied the population genetics of 19 recently fragmented Saxifraga granulata populations (max. distance 61 km) in Luxembourg and neighboring Germany using RAPD markers and a common garden experiment. We assessed (1) the relationships between plant fitness, quantitative genetic variation, molecular genetic variation, and population size; and (2) the relative importance of genetic drift and selection in shaping genetic variation. Molecular genetic diversity was high but did not correlate with population size, habitat conditions, or plant performance. Genetic differentiation was low (F-ST = 0.079 +/- 0.135), and there was no isolation by distance. Longevity, clonality, and the long-lived seed bank of S. granulata may have prevented strong genetic erosion and genetic differentiation among populations. However, genetic distinctness increased with decreasing genetic diversity indicating that random genetic drift occurred in the studied populations. Quantitative and molecular genetic variations were correlated, and their differentiation (Q(ST) vs. F-ST) among S. granulata populations was similar, suggesting that mainly random processes have shaped the quantitative genetic differentiation among populations. However, pairwise quantitative genetic distances increased with geographic and climatic distances, even when adjusted for molecular genetic distances, indicating diversifying selection. Our results indicate that long-lived clonal species may be buffered at least temporarily against the negative effects of fragmentation. The relationship between quantitative genetic and geographic distance may be a more sensitive indicator of selection than Q(ST)-F-ST differences.

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