Title of article
Low Genetic Structure in an Epiphytic Orchidaceae (Oncidium hookeri) in the Atlantic Rainforest of South-eastern Brazil
Author/Authors
ALCANTARA، SUZANA نويسنده , , SEMIR، JOAO نويسنده , , SOLFERINI، VERA NISAKA نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
-1206
From page
1207
To page
0
Abstract
Background and Aims Oncidium hookeri is a neotropical species of epiphytic Orchidaceae found in the Brazilian Atlantic rainforest at the top of the Mantiqueira Range of mountains. The genetic variation of O. hookeri was studied to assess the distribution of genetic variability within and among six populations localized in Atlantic rainforest remnants. Gene flow among populations and the occurrence of recent bottlenecks were investigated in order to infer the degree of isolation of these populations. Methods Thirteen polymorphic loci were used for allozyme electrophoresis. The data were analysed by means of standard statistical approaches, to estimate gene diversity and the genetic structure of the populations. Key Results The mean gene diversity and allelic richness were He = 0·099 and A = 1·75, respectively. F-statistics revealed high heterozygote deficiencies in all populations (FIS = 0·43–0·82). Several rare alleles were found in all the populations, and three populations presented private alleles. Low genetic differentiation among O. hookeri populations was detected (FST = 0·029); natural selection may be involved in PGM locus differentiation among populations. The genetic differentiation between paired populations was low, bearing no correlation with geographic distance (Mantel test: r = –0·34, P = 0·72). Only two populations showed signs of recent bottlenecks. Conclusions The heterozygote deficiency found seems to be caused by pollinator behaviour; the low frequencies of several alleles of different loci can be maintained due to clonal propagation. Despite the stochastic nature of the wind-dispersal of seeds to long distances, this process may promote an effective gene flow among populations, thus avoiding genetic differentiation.
Keywords
genetic structure , wind-dispersed seeds , tropical Atlantic rainforest , insect-pollination , Vegetative propagation , allozyme , Oncidium hookeri , Orchidaceae , Genetic variability
Journal title
Annals of Botany
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Annals of Botany
Record number
118663
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