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Evidence of population bottleneck in Astragalus michauxii (Fabaceae), a narrow endemic of the southeastern United States

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Title Evidence of population bottleneck in Astragalus michauxii (Fabaceae), a narrow endemic of the southeastern United States
Names Wall, Wade A. (creator)
Douglas, Norman A. (creator)
Hoffmann, William A. (creator)
Wentworth, Thomas R. (creator)
Gray, Janet B. (creator)
Xiang, Qiu-Yun Jenny (creator)
Knaus, Brian K. (creator)
Hohmann, Matthew G. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-02 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Springer and can be found at: http://link.springer.com/journal/10592.
Abstract Genetic factors such as decreased genetic
diversity and increased homozygosity can have detrimental
effects on rare species, and may ultimately limit potential
adaptation and exacerbate population declines. The Gulf
and Atlantic Coastal Plain physiographic region has the
second highest level of endemism in the continental USA,
but habitat fragmentation and land use changes have
resulted in catastrophic population declines for many species.
Astragalus michauxii (Fabaceae) is an herbaceous
plant endemic to the region that is considered vulnerable to
extinction, with populations generally consisting of fewer
than 20 individuals. We developed eight polymorphic microsatellites and genotyped 355 individuals from 24
populations. We characterized the population genetic
diversity and structure, tested for evidence of past bottlenecks,
and identified evidence of contemporary gene flow
between populations. The mean ratios of the number of
alleles to the allelic range (M ratio) across loci for A.
michauxii populations were well below the threshold of
0.68 identified as indicative of a past genetic bottleneck.
Genetic diversity estimates were similar across regions and
populations, and comparable to other long-lived perennial
species. Within-population genetic variation accounted for
92% of the total genetic variation found in the species.
Finally, there is evidence for contemporary gene flow
among the populations in North Carolina. Although genetic
factors can threaten rare species, maintaining habitats
through prescribed burning, in concert with other interventions
such as population augmentation or (re)introduction,
are likely most critical to the long term survival of A.
michauxii.
Genre Article
Topic Astragalus
Identifier Wall, W. A., Douglas, N. A., Hoffmann, W. A., Wentworth, T. R., Gray, J. B., Xiang, Q. Y. J., ... & Hohmann, M. G. (2014). Evidence of population bottleneck in Astragalus michauxii (Fabaceae), a narrow endemic of the southeastern United States. Conservation Genetics, 15(1), 153-164. doi:10.1007/s10592-013-0527-2

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