Spatial genetic structure of clonal and sexual reproduction in populations of Adenophora grandiflora (Campanulaceae)

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Abstract

The spatial distribution of clonal versus sexual reproduction in plant populations should generally have differing effects on the levels of biparental inbreeding and the apparent selfing rate, produced via mating by proximity through limited pollen dispersal. We used allozyme loci, join-count statistics, and Moran's spatial autocorrelation statistics to separate the spatial genetic structure caused by clonal reproduction from that maintained in sexually reproduced individuals in two populations of Adenophora grandiflora, a perennial herb. Join-count statistics showed that there were statistically significant clustering of clonal genotypes within distances less than 4 m. Both the entire populations and the sets of sexually reproduced individuals exhibited significant spatial autocorrelation at less than about 12 m, and the sexually reproduced individuals are substantially structured in an isolation-by-distance manner, consistent with a neighborhood size of about 50.

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Chung, M. G., & Epperson, B. K. (1999). Spatial genetic structure of clonal and sexual reproduction in populations of Adenophora grandiflora (Campanulaceae). Evolution, 53(4), 1068–1078. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.1999.tb04522.x

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