Rogers Deborah L, Millar Constance I, Westfall Robert D
Pacific Southwest Research Station, USDA Forest Service, P.O. Box 245, Berkeley, California, 94701.
Evolution. 1999 Feb;53(1):74-90. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1999.tb05334.x.
The fine-scale genetic structure of a subalpine conifer, whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis Engelm.), was studied at nested geographic levels from watershed to adjacent stems in the eastern Sierra Nevada Range of California. A combination of several characteristics contributed to unpredicted genetic structure in this species. This includes being one of only 20 pine species worldwide with wingless, bird-dispersed seeds; having the reputed capacity to reproduce vegetatively; and forming distinct growth morphologies at different elevations in this part of its natural range. Genetic differentiation, as measured with 21 allozyme loci, among the three studied watersheds is virtually negligible (F = 0.004). This is a surprising result because the upper-elevation sites vary somewhat in slope aspect; thus, aspect was confounded with watershed effect. Differentiation between the upper-elevation prostrate krummholz thickets and lower-elevation upright tree clump growth forms is modest (F = 0.051). Much stronger differentiation was measured among the individual thickets and clumps within their sample sites (F = 0.334). Within krummholz thickets, multiple individuals are present and genetic relationships often resemble half- to full-sibling family structure (mean r = 0.320). Canonical trend surface analysis in two intensively sampled thickets indicates greatest genotypic variation in the direction of the prevailing wind. At lower elevations, most (72%) of the tree clumps contained more than one genotype; the remaining clumps are probably multistemmed trees. Within tree clumps, family relationships are closer than those for krummholz thickets-commonly full-sibling to selfed structure (mean r = 0.597). Genetic structure is apparently profoundly influenced by the seed-caching behavior of Clark's nutcracker (Nucifraga columbiana Wilson). Western pine species typically show little among-population differentiation and high levels of within-population genetic variation. In whitebark pine in the eastern Sierra Nevada of California, genetic variation is highly structured, especially within the natural groupings-krummholz thickets and upright tree clumps.
在加利福尼亚州内华达山脉东部,从流域到相邻植株的嵌套地理尺度上,对亚高山针叶树白皮松(Pinus albicaulis Engelm.)的精细遗传结构进行了研究。该物种的几种特征共同导致了其不可预测的遗传结构。这包括它是世界上仅有的20种具有无翅、靠鸟类传播种子的松树物种之一;具有无性繁殖的能力;并且在其自然分布范围的这一区域,在不同海拔形成明显的生长形态。用21个等位酶位点测量的三个研究流域之间的遗传分化几乎可以忽略不计(F = 0.004)。这是一个令人惊讶的结果,因为高海拔地区的坡面在一定程度上有所不同;因此,坡面与流域效应相互混淆。高海拔匍匐矮曲林和低海拔直立树丛生长形态之间的分化程度适中(F = 0.051)。在其采样地点内的各个矮曲林和树丛之间测量到的分化程度要强得多(F = 0.334)。在矮曲林中存在多个个体,其遗传关系通常类似于半同胞到全同胞的家族结构(平均r = 0.320)。对两个密集采样的矮曲林进行的典型趋势面分析表明,在盛行风方向上基因型变异最大。在较低海拔处,大多数(72%)的树丛包含不止一种基因型;其余的树丛可能是多干树。在树丛中,家族关系比矮曲林更紧密——通常是全同胞到自交结构(平均r = 0.597)。遗传结构显然受到克拉克星鸦(Nucifraga columbiana Wilson)种子贮藏行为的深刻影响。西部松树物种通常种群间分化较小,种群内遗传变异水平较高。在加利福尼亚州内华达山脉东部的白皮松中,遗传变异高度结构化,尤其是在自然群体——矮曲林和直立树丛内部。