Honnay Olivier, Jacquemyn Hans
University of Leuven, Biology Department, Laboratory of Plant Ecology, Kasteelpark Arenberg 31, B-3001 Heverlee, Belgium.
Conserv Biol. 2007 Jun;21(3):823-31. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2006.00646.x.
Small plant populations are more prone to extinction due to the loss of genetic variation through random genetic drift, increased selfing, and mating among related individuals. To date, most researchers dealing with genetic erosion in fragmented plant populations have focused on threatened or rare species. We raise the question whether common plant species are as susceptible to habitat fragmentation as rare species. We conducted a formal meta-analysis of habitat fragmentation studies that reported both population size and population genetic diversity. We estimated the overall weighted mean and variance of the correlation coefficients among four different measures of genetic diversity and plant population size. We then tested whether rarity, mating system, and plant longevity are potential moderators of the relationship between population size and genetic diversity. Mean gene diversity, percent polymorphic loci, and allelic richness across studies were positively and highly significantly correlated with population size, whereas no significant relationship was found between population size and the inbreeding coefficient. Genetic diversity of self-compatible species was less affected by decreasing population size than that of obligate outcrossing and self-compatible but mainly outcrossing species. Longevity did not affect the population genetic response to fragmentation. Our most important finding, however, was that common species were as, or more, susceptible to the population genetic consequences of habitat fragmentation than rare species, even when historically or naturally rare species were excluded from the analysis. These results are dramatic in that many more plant species than previously assumed may be vulnerable to genetic erosion and loss of genetic diversity as a result of ongoing fragmentation processes. This implies that many fragmented habitats have become unable to support plant populations that are large enough to maintain a mutation-drift balance and that occupied habitat fragments have become too isolated to allow sufficient gene flow to enable replenishment of lost alleles.
小型植物种群更容易灭绝,这是由于随机遗传漂变导致遗传变异丧失、自交增加以及亲缘个体间交配所致。迄今为止,大多数研究破碎化植物种群遗传侵蚀的研究人员都聚焦于受威胁或珍稀物种。我们提出一个问题,即常见植物物种是否与珍稀物种一样容易受到栖息地破碎化的影响。我们对报告了种群大小和种群遗传多样性的栖息地破碎化研究进行了正式的荟萃分析。我们估计了遗传多样性的四种不同测量指标与植物种群大小之间相关系数的总体加权均值和方差。然后,我们检验了珍稀程度、交配系统和植物寿命是否是种群大小与遗传多样性之间关系的潜在调节因素。各项研究中的平均基因多样性、多态位点百分比和等位基因丰富度与种群大小呈正相关且高度显著相关,而种群大小与近交系数之间未发现显著关系。与专性异交以及自交亲和但主要进行异交的物种相比,自交亲和物种的遗传多样性受种群大小减小的影响较小。寿命并未影响种群对破碎化的遗传响应。然而,我们最重要的发现是,即使在分析中排除历史上或自然状态下的珍稀物种,常见物种对栖息地破碎化的种群遗传后果的易感性与珍稀物种相同,甚至更高。这些结果意义重大,因为可能有比之前设想的更多的植物物种因持续的破碎化过程而容易受到遗传侵蚀和遗传多样性丧失的影响。这意味着许多破碎化的栖息地已无法支持足够大的植物种群来维持突变 - 漂变平衡,而且已占据的栖息地片段变得过于孤立,无法实现足够的基因流动以补充丢失的等位基因。