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Intra- and among-population variations of Juniperus seravschanica were morphologically examined in eight populations originating from elevations of 1300–2200 m a.s.l. in Kyrgyzstan. Eleven traits of needles and cones were studied on 70 vouchers. In addition, height, diameter, stem form, and sex of 172 trees were recorded in the field in order to test whether male trees invest more in vegetative growth than females and if sex ratio is shaped by (limited) environmental resources. Morphological differences among populations were small, but needle length, width and thickness were statistically different. However, differences based on needle traits were independent from geographical, altitudinal and environmental distances. In sharp contrast to studies in other Juniperus species, sex ratio in J. seravschanica was strongly female biased (3.5 females : 1 male). Moreover, no correlation between the habitat conditions and the sex ratio was detected, suggesting that within the altitudinal range of this species, females occur more frequently. This has implications for sustainable use and the conservation of J. seravschanica populations. It is likely, that due to the higher investment of male individuals in vegetative growth males are more exploited than females. An average effective population size of 70% of the respective census suggests that conservation measures and non-selective logging regimes are required to allow reproduction and a natural regeneration of this species.  相似文献   
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Abstract Junipers are main components of semiarid forests in Central Asia. Conservation of these plant genetic resources should be based on an understanding of factors that have shaped species‐level genetic variation. We used Juniperus seravschanica Kom. as a model species to investigate patterns and processes that may be associated with these factors. Novel plastid DNA markers (two minisatellites, one transversion, one indel) were identified and applied to investigate haplotype diversity and population structure in Kyrgyzstan. In total, 540 individuals from 15 populations were analyzed and 11 haplotypes detected. Strong divergence between populations from northern and southern Kyrgyzstan was evident from the haplotype distribution. Gene diversity within populations ranged from 0.083 to 0.765, and was on average higher in southern (0.687) than in northern populations (0.540). A similar pattern was detected in allelic richness. Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) revealed that 11.9% of the total genetic variation was due to differences among regions, 1.5% among populations, and 86.6% within populations. NST was not significantly different from GST (0.125), suggesting no evidence of a phylogeographic pattern. A Mantel test detected a weak but significant isolation‐by‐distance pattern for the whole dataset and southern populations separately. These results suggest that the north of Kyrgyzstan was relatively recently colonized by migrants from southern populations, probably associated with favorable conditions during the early Holocene. The humid Fergana Valley and Fergana Range are probable ecological barriers to gene flow between northern and southern populations.  相似文献   
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