Broyles S
Am J Bot. 1998 Aug;85(8):1091.
The recent Wisconsin glaciation has provided opportunities for examining the effects of postglacial recolonization on the population genetics of plant and animal communities. In this study allozyme Variation was examined in 19 populations of the herbaceous perennial Asclepias exaltata occurring in previously glaciated regions of North America. These northern populations of A. exaltata possess significantly fewer polymorphic loci (46.31 ± 2.7; mean ± 1 SD), alleles per polymorphic locus (1.84 ± 0.24), and expected heterozygosity (0.133 ± 0.031) than populations found in the Pleistocene refugium in the southern Appalachians. Population-level allozyme diversity decreased linearly from south to north and from east to west. Nineteen uncommon alleles previously observed in southern Appalachian populations were undetected in the northern region. Seven common alleles exhibited a clinal change in allele frequency. Of these, only Pgd-1a and Mnr-1c were at low-frequency in the southern Appalachians and increased significantly with increasing latitude and longitude, respectively. Despite this loss of allozyme diversity following postglacial migration, northern populations of A. exaltata have higher allozyme diversity and lower population differentiation (G" = 0.1 17) than mean values for other long-lived herbaceous perennials. Increased habitat fragmentation in northern regions and potential habitat loss in the southern Appalachians are likely to reduce the historically rich gene pool that has provided the genetic stock for postglacial recoveries.
最近的威斯康星冰川作用为研究冰期后重新定殖对动植物群落种群遗传学的影响提供了机会。在本研究中,对北美以前冰川覆盖地区的19个多年生草本植物高根马利筋种群的等位酶变异进行了检测。与阿巴拉契亚山脉南部更新世避难所中的种群相比,这些高根马利筋的北方种群具有显著更少的多态位点(46.31 ± 2.7;平均值 ± 1标准差)、每个多态位点的等位基因数(1.84 ± 0.24)和预期杂合度(0.133 ± 0.031)。种群水平的等位酶多样性从南到北、从东到西呈线性下降。以前在阿巴拉契亚山脉南部种群中观察到的19个罕见等位基因在北方地区未被检测到。7个常见等位基因的等位基因频率呈现渐变。其中,只有Pgd - 1a和Mnr - 1c在阿巴拉契亚山脉南部频率较低,分别随纬度和经度增加而显著增加。尽管冰期后迁移后等位酶多样性有所丧失,但高根马利筋的北方种群比其他长寿多年生草本植物的平均值具有更高的等位酶多样性和更低的种群分化(G" = 0.117)。北方地区栖息地破碎化加剧以及阿巴拉契亚山脉南部潜在的栖息地丧失可能会减少历史上丰富的基因库,而该基因库为冰期后的恢复提供了遗传储备。