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Abstract
of a paper based on work funded in part by the Australian Flora Foundation
Evidence for ancient genetic subdivision among recently fragmented populations
of the endangered shrub Grevillea caleyi (Proteaceae)
TM Llorens, DJ Ayre and RJ Whelan
Department of Biological Sciences, Institute for Conservation Biology,
University of Wollongong NSW 2522, Australia
Heredity (2004) 92, 519–526 Grant details
The genetic effects of population fragmentation cannot be interpreted
without understanding the underlying pattern of genetic variation resulting
from historic population processes. We used AFLP markers to determine
genetic structure and distribution of genetic diversity among populations
of an endangered Australian shrub Grevillea caleyi (Proteaceae). Populations
that occurred historically on four ridges have new been fragmented to
varying degrees, producing some large, relatively pristine populations
and very small populations consisting of fewer than 10 adult plants.
We found marked population genetic structure (65.9% of genetic variation
was among populations) and a significant relationship between genetic
and geographic distance (rm¼0.564, P¼0.004). However, only
14% of overall genetic differentiation was attributable to variation
among ridges, compared with 52% among populations within ridges. Moreover,
genetic diversity within samples of plants did not vary with either population
size or degree of isolation. Thus, the present genetic structure of populations
is probably almost entirely the product of historical events. Fine-scale
structuring within populations prior to fragmentation may have been caused
by limited seed and pollen dispersal, despite a complex suite of (mostly
avian) pollinators, and a mixed mating system that allows a large amount
of selfing. The combined effects of adult longevity and a soil-stored
seed bank may have buffered the recently fragmented populations against
the effects of dramatic reductions in numbers of adult plants.
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