Population genetics of the Federally Threatened Miccosukee gooseberry (Ribes echinellum), an endemic North American species

被引:0
作者
Nora H. Oleas
Eric J. B. von Wettberg
Vivian Negrón-Ortiz
机构
[1] Universidad Tecnológica Indoamérica,Centro de Investigación de la Biodiversidad y Cambio Climático
[2] Florida International University,Department of Biological Sciences
[3] Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden,Kushland Institute for Tropical Science
[4] U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service,Department of Botany
[5] Miami University,undefined
来源
Conservation Genetics | 2014年 / 15卷
关键词
Population genetics; Miccosuke gooseberry; Federally Threatened; Microsatellites; Conservation; Florida and South Carolina;
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摘要
Ribes echinellum (Coville) Rehder (Miccosukee gooseberry; Grossulariaceae) is a Federally Threatened species known from only two localities: Jefferson County (Florida, FL) and McCormick County (South Carolina, SC). This perennial shrub, ca. 1 m tall, is deciduous, and reproduces both vegetatively (clonal growth) and sexually (seed production). Recent surveys of the FL population revealed a dramatic decline in plant numbers. To assist in conservation and management of this species in FL and SC populations, microsatellite genetic markers were used to identify genotypes and assess the genetic structure of R. echinellum. We genotyped seven microsatellite loci in 102 individuals: 74 collected in FL and 28 in SC. Unbiased heterozygosity was between 0.28 and 0.53. All seven loci were polymorphic, showing a range of 1.52–2.13 effective number of alleles per locus (mean = 1.75). The two populations of R. echinellum show low genetic diversity, especially in SC. Clonality was not widespread, but was higher in the SC population. Both populations show signatures of bottlenecks but isolation by distance was not evident. We found significant deviation from HW equilibrium, with higher number of heterozygotes than expected. However when HW test was done for the combined populations as two separate groups, only FL showed a significant HW test and for SC the test was non-significant. Bayesian analysis and FST values suggest high genetic divergence between the populations. These results are important for developing a recovery plan and an ex situ and reintroduction conservation programs.
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页码:749 / 755
页数:6
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