Population genetics of two rare perennials in isolated wetlands: Sagittaria isoetiformis and S. teres (Alismataceae)

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Abstract

We investigated genetic structure in two closely related perennial plants that occur in isolated wetlands: Sagittaria isoetiformis, restricted to the southeastern Coastal Plain of North America, and S. teres, endemic to the northeastern Coastal Plain. Using horizontal starch-gel electrophoresis, we screened 527 individuals from 11 populations of S. isoetiformis and 367 individuals from seven populations of S. teres. A high proportion of the 16 loci were polymorphic (%P(s) = 93.8% in S. isoetiformis and %P(s) = 75.0% in S. teres), with higher mean numbers of alleles per polymorphic locus and effective alleles per locus in S. isoetiformis (AP = 3.27, A(E) = 1.90) than in S. teres (AP = 2.58, A(E) = 1.30). Species- and population-level expected heterozygosities were higher in S. isoetiformis (H(ES) = 0.399, H(EP) = 0.218) than in S. teres (H(ES) = 0.177, H(EP) = 0.101). Jackknife estimates of F statistics indicated moderate levels of inbreeding in S. teres (F(IS) = 23.1%). Strong differentiation characterized these geographically isolated populations (G(ST) = 39.9% in S. isoetiformis, and G(ST) = 26.1% in S. teres). Genetic identities varied substantially within (Ī = 75%, range = 0.558-0.963 in S. isoetiformis; Ī = 89%, range = 0.776-0.963 in S. teres) and among species (Ī = 81%, range = 0.506-0.882), leading to the discrimination of four regional population clusters using nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMDS). It appears that S. isoetiformis and S. teres are a progenitor-derivative species pair.

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Edwards, A. L., & Sharitz, R. R. (2000). Population genetics of two rare perennials in isolated wetlands: Sagittaria isoetiformis and S. teres (Alismataceae). American Journal of Botany, 87(8), 1147–1158. https://doi.org/10.2307/2656651

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