• Title of article

    A two-generation analysis of pollen pool genetic structure in flowering dogwood, Cornus florida (Cornaceae), in the Missouri Ozarks

  • Author/Authors

    Sork، Victoria L. نويسنده , , Smouse، Peter E. نويسنده , , Apsit، Victoria J. نويسنده , , Dyer، Rodney J. نويسنده , , Westfall، Robert D. نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
  • Pages
    -261
  • From page
    262
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    Anthropogenic landscape change can disrupt gene flow. As part of the Missouri Ozark Forest Ecosystem Project, this study examined whether silvicultural practices influence pollen-mediated gene movement in the insect-pollinated species, Cornus florida L., by comparing pollen pool structure ((phi)st) among clear-cutting, selective cutting, and uncut regimes with the expectation that pollen movement should be least in the uncut regime. Using a sample of 1500 seedlings--10 each from 150 seed parents (43 in clear-cut, 74 in selective, and 33 in control sites) from six sites (each ranging from 266 to 527 ha), eight allozyme loci were analyzed with a pollen pool structure approach known as TwoGener (Smouse et al., 2001; Evolution 55: 260–271). This analysis revealed that pollen pool structure was less in clear-cut ((phi)C = 0.090, P < 0.001) than in uncut areas ((phi)U = 0.174, P < 0.001), with selective-cut intermediate ((phi)S = 0.125, P < 0.001). These estimates translate into more effective pollen donors (Nep) in clear-cut (Nep = 5.56) and selective-cut (Nep = 4.00) areas than in uncut areas (Nep = 2.87). We demonstrate that (phi)C <=(phi)S <=(phi)U, with (phi)C significantly smaller than (phi)U (P < 0.034). The findings imply that, as long as a sufficiently large number of seed parents remain to provide adequate reproduction and to avoid a genetic bottleneck in the effective number of mothers, silvicultural management may not negatively affect the effective number of pollen parents, and hence subsequent genetic diversity in Cornus florida.
  • Keywords
    TwoGener , California , Cornaceae , Gene flow , genetic structure , landscape change , silvicultural treatment , pollen movement
  • Journal title
    American Journal of Botany
  • Serial Year
    2005
  • Journal title
    American Journal of Botany
  • Record number

    33125