Abstract
Generally divergent lineages often coexist within populations of the annual legume Amphicarpaea bracteata. At one site dominated by two such lineages (termed biotypes "C" and "S"), isolates of root-nodule bacteria (Bradyrhizobium sp.) were sampled from both hosts and analyzed by enzyme electrophoresis. Symbiont populations on the two plant biotypes were higly district. Out of 15 bacterial multilocus genotypes detected (among 51 isolates analyzed), only one was shared in common by the two plant biotypes. Cluster analysis revealed three bacterial lineages (designated I, II, and III), with lineage I found exclusively on biotypes C plants, and the two other lineages almost completely restricted to biotypes S hosts. Laboratory inoculation tests indicated that lineage I bacteria were strictly specialized on biotypes C hosts, forming few or no nodules on plants of the other host biotype. Bacterial lineages II and III were capable of forming nodules on both kinds of plants, but nodule numbers were often significantly higher on biotype S hosts. The nonrandom association between plant and bacterial lineages at this site implies that genetic diversity of host is an important factor in the maintenance of polymorphis within the symbiont population.
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Spoerke, J. M., Wilkinson, H. H., & Parker, M. A. (1996). Nonrandom genotypic associations in a legume - Bradyrhizobium mutualism. Evolution, 50(1), 146–154. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.1996.tb04481.x
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