Plue Jan, Vandepitte Katrien, Honnay Olivier, Cousins Sara A O
Biogeography and Geomatics, Department of Physical Geography, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden.
School of Natural Sciences, Technology and Environmental Studies, Södertörn University, Stockholm, Sweden.
Ann Bot. 2017 Sep 1;120(3):373-385. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcx057.
Habitat fragmentation threatens global biodiversity. Many plant species persist in habitat fragments via persistent life cycle stages such as seed banks, generating a species extinction debt. Here, seed banks are hypothesized to cause a temporal delay in the expected loss of genetic variation, which can be referred to as a genetic extinction debt, as a possible mechanism behind species extinction debts.
Fragmented grassland populations of Campanula rotundifolia were examined for evidence of a genetic extinction debt, investigating if the seed bank contributed to the extinction debt build-up. The genetic make-up of 15 above- and below-ground populations was analysed in relation to historical and current levels of habitat fragmentation, both separately and combined.
Genetic diversity was highest in above-ground populations, though below-ground populations contained 8 % of unique alleles that were absent above-ground. Above-ground genetic diversity and composition were related to historical patch size and connectivity, but not current patch characteristics, suggesting the presence of a genetic extinction debt in the above-ground populations. No such relationships were found for the below-ground populations. Genetic diversity measures still showed a response to historical but not present landscape characteristics when combining genetic diversity of the above- and below-ground populations.
The fragmented C. rotundifolia populations exhibited a genetic extinction debt. However, the role of the seed banks in the build-up of this extinction debt is probably small, since the limited, unique genetic diversity of the seed bank alone seems unable to counter the detrimental effects of habitat fragmentation on the population genetic structure of C. rotundifolia.
栖息地破碎化威胁着全球生物多样性。许多植物物种通过种子库等持久的生命周期阶段在栖息地碎片中存续,从而产生物种灭绝债务。在此,种子库被假定为导致遗传变异预期丧失出现时间延迟的原因,这可被称为遗传灭绝债务,它是物种灭绝债务背后的一种可能机制。
对风铃草破碎化草原种群进行研究,以寻找遗传灭绝债务的证据,探究种子库是否对灭绝债务的累积有贡献。分别并综合分析了15个地上和地下种群的遗传组成与历史和当前栖息地破碎化水平的关系。
地上种群的遗传多样性最高,不过地下种群含有8%的地上所没有的独特等位基因。地上遗传多样性和组成与历史斑块大小和连通性有关,但与当前斑块特征无关,这表明地上种群存在遗传灭绝债务。地下种群未发现此类关系。当综合地上和地下种群的遗传多样性时,遗传多样性指标仍显示出对历史而非当前景观特征的响应。
风铃草破碎化种群表现出遗传灭绝债务。然而,种子库在这种灭绝债务累积过程中的作用可能很小,因为仅种子库有限的独特遗传多样性似乎无法抵消栖息地破碎化对风铃草种群遗传结构的不利影响。