Genetic variation and structure in the Mediterranean shrubs Myrtus communis and Pistacia lentiscus in different landscape contexts |
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Authors: | S. Nora R. G. Albaladejo A. Aparicio |
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Affiliation: | Departamento de Biología Vegetal y Ecología, Universidad de Sevilla, Sevilla, Spain |
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Abstract: | Studies concerning different habitat configurations can provide insights into the complex interactions between species’ life‐history traits and the environment and can help to predict patterns in population genetics. In this study, we compared patterns of genetic variation in two Mediterranean shrub species (Myrtus communis and Pistacia lentiscus) that co‐occur in populations within three contrasting landscape contexts: continuous, fragmented‐connected and fragmented‐isolated populations. Analysing variation at microsatellites loci, our results revealed weak responses to the landscape contexts. We rather found a population‐specific response in both study species. However, despite both study species sharing similar levels of genetic diversity, Myrtus displayed higher levels of homozygosity and genetic differentiation among populations, stronger patterns of within‐population spatial genetic structure, lower values of mutation‐scaled effective population size and stronger evidence for recent genetic bottlenecks than Pistacia. This result highlights the influence of past events (e.g. historical connectivity, fluctuations in population size) and local factors (e.g. microhabitat availability for recruitment, habitat quality, plant density, native fauna) and that the landscape configuration per se (i.e. fragment size and/or isolation) might not completely determine the species’ genetic patterns. |
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Keywords: | Habitat fragmentation insect‐pollinated species mating systems mediterranean landscapes population genetics wind‐pollinated species |
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