Investigations into the Genetic Variation, Population Structure, and Breeding Systems of the FernAsplenium trichomanessubsp.quadrivalens
- 1 March 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in International Journal of Plant Sciences
- Vol. 161 (2) , 233-244
- https://doi.org/10.1086/314258
Abstract
The genetic structure of five populations of the tetraploid fern Asplenium trichomanes subsp. quadrivalens in northern Switzerland was analyzed. Asplenium trichomanes subsp. quadrivalens is one of the most common and most widespread ferns in Europe. In this study we have combined genetic investigations, spatial autocorrelation, and breeding experiments to investigate in detail five populations from natural rock faces. Enzyme electrophoresis revealed very low genetic variability within and among the populations. The small amount of variation was partitioned mainly among the localities, indicated by high Fst values up to 0.764. Overall means of the proportion of polymorphic loci ( ), the mean number of alleles per locus ( ), and the mean expected heterozygosity ( ) were low compared with other ferns (e.g., Kirkpatrick et al. 1990). Very few heterozygous individuals were found. Values of the fixation index (F) were high, ranging between 0.732 and 1.000 and indicating substantial inbreeding. Spatial autocorrelation showed different patterns of substructure in populations of A. trichomanes subsp. quadrivalens with a tendency for patches in short distances (up to 1.5 m). The breeding experiments with isolated prothalli and prothalli pairs showed that a mean of 56.4% of the isolated prothalli were successful in sporophyte formation. The highest rate in one population was 83.3%. We conclude that genetic load must be low in A. trichomanes subsp. quadrivalens. Sporophyte formation was statistically more successful in the experiments with gametophyte pairs than in isolates, indicating that additional cross‐fertilization occurred. The latter agreed with the occurrence of few heterozygote samples and the small number of multilocus phenotypes found in natural habitats. Asplenium trichomanes subsp. quadrivalens is shown to be a highly inbreeding taxon with the capability of single spore colonization and subsequent founding of new populations. Such features can be hypothesized to have contributed to the postglacial colonization and the widespread distribution of this taxon in Europe.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Genetic structure, reproductive biology and ecology of isolated populations of Asplenium csikii (Aspleniaceae, Pteridophyta)Heredity, 1999
- Where are the glacial refugia in Europe? Evidence from pteridophytesBiological Journal of the Linnean Society, 1999
- Marked Spatial Genetic Structure in Three Populations of a Weedy Fern, Pteris multifida Poir., and Reestimation of Its Selfing RatePlant Species Biology, 1997
- Genetic variation in small, isolated fern populationsJournal of Vegetation Science, 1996
- Predominant Inbreeding and its Genetic Consequences in a Homosporous Fern Genus, Sceptridium (Ophioglossaceae)Systematic Botany, 1992
- Inbreeding in Natural Populations of the Annual Polyploid Fern Ceratopteris thalictroides (Parkeriaceae)Systematic Botany, 1991
- Trends for Inbreeding in Polyploid PteridophytesPlant Species Biology, 1990
- Evolution of Inbreeding and Outcrossing in Ferns and Fern-AlliesPlant Species Biology, 1990
- Les formes chromosomiques d'Asplenium trichomanes L.Bulletin du Jardin botanique national de Belgique / Bulletin van de National Plantentuin van België, 1968
- NOTES ON CONTINUOUS STOCHASTIC PHENOMENABiometrika, 1950