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首页> 外文期刊>Genetica >Diversity and genetic connectivity among populations of a threatened tree (Dalbergia nigra) in a recently fragmented landscape of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest
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Diversity and genetic connectivity among populations of a threatened tree (Dalbergia nigra) in a recently fragmented landscape of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest

机译:巴西大西洋森林近来零散的景观中濒危树木(黑檀(Dalbergia nigra))种群之间的多样性和遗传连通性

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摘要

In this study we evaluated the influence of recent landscape fragmentation on the dynamics of remnant fragments from the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. This biome is one of the richest in the world and has been extensively deforested and fragmented. We sampled five populations of the threatened Dalbergia nigra, a tree endemic to the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, two located in a large reserve of continuous forest and three in fragments of different sizes and levels of disturbance. In order to assess historical changes, considering the longevity of the analyzed species, 119 adults and 116 saplings were genotyped for six microsatellite loci. Lower levels of genetic diversity were found in the most impacted fragments when compared to the most preserved population located inside the reserve, and there was significant genetic structure among the populations studied (pairwise F (ST) = 0.031-0.152; pairwise D (EST) = 0.039-0.301). However, genetic structure among saplings (F (ST) = 0.056; D (EST) = 0.231) was significantly lower than among adults (F (ST) = 0.088; D (EST) = 0.275). Estimates of contemporary gene flow based on assignment tests corroborated this result, suggesting that fragmentation led to an increase in gene flow. This connectivity among remnant fragments could mitigate the loss of genetic diversity through a metapopulation dynamic, but the high rate of habitat loss and the unknown long-term genetic effects add uncertainty. These results, taken together with the presence of private alleles in disturbed populations, highlight the importance of preserving the extant fragments.
机译:在这项研究中,我们评估了近期景观破碎对巴西大西洋森林残余碎片动态的影响。这个生物群落是世界上最丰富的生物群落之一,已被广泛砍伐和破碎。我们采样了五种濒临灭绝的黑檀(Dalbergia nigra)种群,这是巴西大西洋森林特有的树,两个种群位于大量连续森林中,另外三个种群的大小和干扰程度不同。为了评估历史变化,考虑到所分析物种的寿命,对六个微卫星基因座进行了119位成年和116株幼树的基因分型。与位于保护区内的保存最完好的种群相比,受影响最严重的片段中发现的遗传多样性水平较低,并且研究的种群之间存在显着的遗传结构(成对F(ST)= 0.031-0.152;成对D(EST) = 0.039-0.301)。然而,幼树之间的遗传结构(F(ST)= 0.056; D(EST)= 0.231)显着低于成年个体(F(ST)= 0.088; D(EST)= 0.275)。基于分配测试的当代基因流量估计值证实了这一结果,表明片段化导致基因流量增加。残余片段之间的这种连通性可以通过种群动态来减轻遗传多样性的丧失,但是栖息地丧失的高速率和未知的长期遗传效应增加了不确定性。这些结果,加上受干扰人群中私人等位基因的存在,凸显了保存现存片段的重要性。

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