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POPULATION VARIATION,OUTCROSSING, AND COLONIZATION OF DISTURBED AREAS BY CALAMAGROSTIS CANADENSIS: EVIDENCE FROM ALLOZYME ANALYSIS
Authors:S Ellen MacDonald  Victor J Lieffers
Institution:Department of Forest Science, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 2H1 Canada
Abstract:Calamagrostis canadensis (a rhizomatous grass) exists in temperate forest sites of different successional age. It can rapidly colonize disturbed sites to form dense swards. We examined allozyme variation in: four populations (mature forest, intermediate aged forest, forest cutblock, wetland); nine small plots (2 m × 4 m) within the cutblock; and progeny of several families from three populations; in order to assess the mode of colonization of disturbed areas and the effect of successional changes on population genetic structure. All four populations showed equal and extensive genetic variation (1.5 to 1.7 alleles per locus K], 41.7% to 50% polymorphic loci PPL], Hst = 0.155 to 0.208) and were not genetically differentiated (Gst = 0.0193, 1 = 0.986 to 0.997). The cutblock subpopulations also showed considerable genetic variation (K = 1.6 to 1.8, PPL = 50% to 58.3%, Hst = 0.151 to 0.278) and no microdifferentiation (Gst = 0.034, I = 0.967 to 0.997). We found 14 different genotypes among the 30 individuals sampled from the cutblock as a whole (based on five polymorphic loci). The cutblock subpopulations had from nine to 14 different genotypes each (same five loci, 18 individuals per subpopulation). Seed produced was primarily outcrossed (multilocus estimate 0.888 to 0.900). We concluded that disturbed sites are colonized primarily by sexually produced seedlings. Potential genetic drift and natural selection, which occur during subsequent successional changes, do not result in reduced genetic variation or population differentiation.
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