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RIBOSOMAL DNA LENGTH POLYMORPHISMS WITHIN POPULATIONS OF XYLARIA MAGNOLIAE (ASCOMYCOTINA)
Authors:Sharon P. Gowan  Rytas Vilgalys
Affiliation:Department of Botany, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, 27706
Abstract:
Xylaria magnoliae forms abundant conidial and sexual fruiting structures on the fallen strobili of Magnolia spp. throughout the southeastern United States. Populations of X. magnoliae may be identified as isolates originating from a single strobilus, among different strobili from different host trees, and different host tree localities. We examined the stratified structure of X. magnoliae populations by analysis of their ribosomal DNA restriction patterns. A sample of 48 single-conidial isolates was obtained from strobili of both Magnolia grandiflora and M. fraseri in the piedmont and mountains of North Carolina and Georgia. Southern blotting experiments revealed considerable variation in rDNA lengths between and within different isolates. Although a single rDNA phenotype usually dominates within a particular collecting locality, different phenotypes were also observed within a locality and even between isolates obtained from a single strobilus. Some rDNA restriction phenotypes are distributed over localities separated by up to 400 km. These results suggest a fine-grained population structure for X. magnoliae, together with the potential for genetic exchange and dispersal between widely separated localities.
Keywords:
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