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Allozyme variation and racial differentiation in Swedish Carex lepidocarpa s.l. (Cyperaceae)
Authors:Mikael Hedré  n,Honor C. Prentice
Affiliation:Department of Systematic Botany, Uppsala University, Villavägen 6, S-75236, Uppsala, Sweden;Department of Ecological Botany, Uppsala University, Villavögen 14, S-752 36, Uppsala and Department of Genetics, Uppsala University, Box 7003, S-750 07, Uppsala, Sweden
Abstract:Two morphological races have previously been recognized within the sedge, Carex lepidocarpa , in Sweden. These largely allopatric races are accorded specific status, as C. lepidocarpa s.s. and C. jemtlandica , in Scandinavian floras. A study of allozyme variation in populations from 80 Swedish sites supports the morphological evidence for racial differentiation within C. lepidocarpa. The two races differ from each other in terms of allele frequencies at polymorphic loci and also show different levels of within-population genetic diversity. Material that is morphologically referable to C. lepidocarpa s.s. is characterized by relatively high levels of allozyme variation, both within and between populations. Carex lepidocarpa s.s. is widespread in southern Sweden. In contrast, material that is morphologically assignable to C. jemtlandica shows low levels of within-population genetic diversity, and there is little differentiation between the geographically separated isolates of C. jemtlandica in northern Sweden and on the Baltic island of Gotland. The high degree of morphological similarity and moderate levels of genetic differentiation between the two races within C. lepidocarpa indicate that it is more appropriate to recognize the races as subspecies than as species. The low levels of genetic variation in C. jemtlandica , both within and between populations, suggest that C. jemtlandica may have arisen from C. lepidocarpa (or a near ancestor of C. lepidocarpa) as a result of population fragmentation and isolation in glacial refugia, or during the process of post-glacial colonization of Scandinavia. Lack of allozyme evidence for extensive hybridization between the two races of C. lepidocarpa , despite their ability to hybridize freely where their ranges overlap at present, supports the suggestion that the two races have had separate post-glacial histories.
Keywords:CarexJava complex    Carex jemthndica    geographic variation    plant migration    historical processes
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