Genetic differentiation over a spatial environmental gradient in wild Rubus ideaus populations
Open Access
- 3 March 2003
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in New Phytologist
- Vol. 157 (3) , 667-675
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1469-8137.2003.00693.x
Abstract
• The distribution is examined of molecular (random amplified polymorphic DNA) markers within and between 12 wild raspberry (Rubus ideaus) populations ranging over 600 m altitude and 40 km distance from a lowland area of extensive raspberry cultivation to remote upland sites. • Most individuals are distinct, suggesting that seedling recruitment is the main means of propagation, but mean genetic similarities within sites (> 80%) are much greater than between sites (> 50%), suggesting a hindrance to gene movement between sites. • Sites of genetically distinct populations can be grouped in lowland, valley and upland clusters; genetic similarity between sites decreased at slightly > 4% per 100 m difference in altitude from c. 80% between adjacent sites to 50% at 600 m altitude difference. • Together with physiological data collected previously, the molecular evidence confirms that wild populations are more diverse than cultivars and suggests little gene flow from cultivated to wild, a result perhaps of reproductive asynchrony and little opportunity for seedling recruitment in established populations. The cause of the genetic differentiation between sites is not known and requires further study.Keywords
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