Origin, taxonomy and population structure of the allopolyploid peat mossSphagnum majus |
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Authors: | S. M. Såstad K. I. Flatberg L. Hanssen |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Natural History, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, N-7491 Trondheim, Norway |
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Abstract: | The polyploid peat mossSphagnum majus shows considerable phenotypic plasticity along ecological gradients in mires. It is considered taxonomically heterogeneous, and two subspecies have been described. Isozyme analyses were carried out on populations ofS. majus from Central Norway and from eastern coast of North America in order to assess the origin, taxonomy and population structure of this species. High levels of fixed heterozygosity in the populations demonstrate thatS. majus is a genetic allopolyploid. At all loci screened, extant populations ofS. cuspidatum shared enzyme bands withS. majus. The other most likely progenitor based on morphology,S. annulatum, was fixed for enzyme bands not found inS. majus. The progenitor genotype ofS. annulatum may have been missed because of inadequate sampling or extinction. Alternatively, another extinct or undetected taxon may constitute the second progenitor. The observed patterns of genetic variation and linkage disequilibria were uncorrelated with the previously proposed subspecific classification ofS. majus. Lack of genetic divergence between continents suggests that the origins ofS. majus in Europe and North America were not independent. Low mutation rates and large effective population sizes may be important causing populations to diverge slowly, and may explain the observed patterns without hypothesising frequent long-distance dispersal. |
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Keywords: | Sphagnum Sphagnum majus Sphagnum cuspidatum complex Sphagnum annulatum complex Isozymes Allopolyploidy reproductive isolation genetic divergence dispersal genetic drift |
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