-
Je něco špatně v tomto záznamu ?
Differential role of a persistent seed bank for genetic variation in early vs. late successional stages
B. Schulz, W. Durka, J. Danihelka, RL. Eckstein,
Jazyk angličtina Země Spojené státy americké
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články, práce podpořená grantem
NLK
Directory of Open Access Journals
od 2006
Free Medical Journals
od 2006
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
od 2006
PubMed Central
od 2006
Europe PubMed Central
od 2006
ProQuest Central
od 2006-12-01
Open Access Digital Library
od 2006-10-01
Open Access Digital Library
od 2006-01-01
Open Access Digital Library
od 2006-01-01
Medline Complete (EBSCOhost)
od 2008-01-01
Nursing & Allied Health Database (ProQuest)
od 2006-12-01
Health & Medicine (ProQuest)
od 2006-12-01
Public Health Database (ProQuest)
od 2006-12-01
ROAD: Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources
od 2006
- MeSH
- analýza polymorfismu délky amplifikovaných restrikčních fragmentů MeSH
- biodiverzita MeSH
- ekosystém MeSH
- genetická variace genetika MeSH
- semenná banka * MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
Persistent seed banks are predicted to have an important impact on population genetic processes by increasing effective population size and storing past genetic diversity. Accordingly, persistent seed banks may buffer genetic effects of disturbance, fragmentation and/or selection. However, empirical studies surveying the relationship between aboveground and seed bank genetics under changing environments are scarce. Here, we compared genetic variation of aboveground and seed bank cohorts in 15 populations of the partially cleistogamous Viola elatior in two contrasting early and late successional habitats characterized by strong differences in light-availability and declining population size. Using AFLP markers, we found significantly higher aboveground than seed bank genetic diversity in early successional meadow but not in late successional woodland habitats. Moreover, individually, three of eight woodland populations even showed higher seed bank than aboveground diversity. Genetic differentiation among populations was very strong (фST = 0.8), but overall no significant differentiation could be detected between above ground and seed bank cohorts. Small scale spatial genetic structure was generally pronounced but was much stronger in meadow (Sp-statistic: aboveground: 0.60, seed bank: 0.32) than in woodland habitats (aboveground: 0.11; seed bank: 0.03). Our findings indicate that relative seed bank diversity (i.e. compared to aboveground diversity) increases with ongoing succession and despite decreasing population size. As corroborated by markedly lower small-scale genetic structure in late successional habitats, we suggest that the observed changes in relative seed bank diversity are driven by an increase of outcrossing rates. Persistent seed banks in Viola elatior hence will counteract effects of drift and selection, and assure a higher chance for the species' long term persistence, particularly maintaining genetic variation in declining populations of late successional habitats and thus enhancing success rates of population recovery after disturbance events.
Department of Community Ecology Halle Jena Leipzig Leipzig Germany
Department of Environmental and Life Sciences Biology Karlstad University Karlstad Sweden
Citace poskytuje Crossref.org
- 000
- 00000naa a2200000 a 4500
- 001
- bmc19027963
- 003
- CZ-PrNML
- 005
- 20190815112727.0
- 007
- ta
- 008
- 190813s2018 xxu f 000 0|eng||
- 009
- AR
- 024 7_
- $a 10.1371/journal.pone.0209840 $2 doi
- 035 __
- $a (PubMed)30586422
- 040 __
- $a ABA008 $b cze $d ABA008 $e AACR2
- 041 0_
- $a eng
- 044 __
- $a xxu
- 100 1_
- $a Schulz, Benjamin $u Institute of Landscape Ecology and Resource Management, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Giessen, Germany.
- 245 10
- $a Differential role of a persistent seed bank for genetic variation in early vs. late successional stages / $c B. Schulz, W. Durka, J. Danihelka, RL. Eckstein,
- 520 9_
- $a Persistent seed banks are predicted to have an important impact on population genetic processes by increasing effective population size and storing past genetic diversity. Accordingly, persistent seed banks may buffer genetic effects of disturbance, fragmentation and/or selection. However, empirical studies surveying the relationship between aboveground and seed bank genetics under changing environments are scarce. Here, we compared genetic variation of aboveground and seed bank cohorts in 15 populations of the partially cleistogamous Viola elatior in two contrasting early and late successional habitats characterized by strong differences in light-availability and declining population size. Using AFLP markers, we found significantly higher aboveground than seed bank genetic diversity in early successional meadow but not in late successional woodland habitats. Moreover, individually, three of eight woodland populations even showed higher seed bank than aboveground diversity. Genetic differentiation among populations was very strong (фST = 0.8), but overall no significant differentiation could be detected between above ground and seed bank cohorts. Small scale spatial genetic structure was generally pronounced but was much stronger in meadow (Sp-statistic: aboveground: 0.60, seed bank: 0.32) than in woodland habitats (aboveground: 0.11; seed bank: 0.03). Our findings indicate that relative seed bank diversity (i.e. compared to aboveground diversity) increases with ongoing succession and despite decreasing population size. As corroborated by markedly lower small-scale genetic structure in late successional habitats, we suggest that the observed changes in relative seed bank diversity are driven by an increase of outcrossing rates. Persistent seed banks in Viola elatior hence will counteract effects of drift and selection, and assure a higher chance for the species' long term persistence, particularly maintaining genetic variation in declining populations of late successional habitats and thus enhancing success rates of population recovery after disturbance events.
- 650 _2
- $a analýza polymorfismu délky amplifikovaných restrikčních fragmentů $7 D054458
- 650 _2
- $a biodiverzita $7 D044822
- 650 _2
- $a ekosystém $7 D017753
- 650 _2
- $a genetická variace $x genetika $7 D014644
- 650 12
- $a semenná banka $7 D000068098
- 655 _2
- $a časopisecké články $7 D016428
- 655 _2
- $a práce podpořená grantem $7 D013485
- 700 1_
- $a Durka, Walter $u Department of Community Ecology (BZF), Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research-UFZ, Halle (Saale), Germany. German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany.
- 700 1_
- $a Danihelka, Jiří $u Department of Botany and Zoology, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic. Institute of Botany, The Czech Academy of Sciences, Průhonice, Czech Republic.
- 700 1_
- $a Eckstein, Rolf Lutz $u Department of Environmental and Life Sciences-Biology, Karlstad University, Karlstad, Sweden.
- 773 0_
- $w MED00180950 $t PloS one $x 1932-6203 $g Roč. 13, č. 12 (2018), s. e0209840
- 856 41
- $u https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30586422 $y Pubmed
- 910 __
- $a ABA008 $b sig $c sign $y a $z 0
- 990 __
- $a 20190813 $b ABA008
- 991 __
- $a 20190815112955 $b ABA008
- 999 __
- $a ok $b bmc $g 1433112 $s 1066423
- BAS __
- $a 3
- BAS __
- $a PreBMC
- BMC __
- $a 2018 $b 13 $c 12 $d e0209840 $e 20181226 $i 1932-6203 $m PLoS One $n PLoS One $x MED00180950
- LZP __
- $a Pubmed-20190813