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Clonal distribution, fertility and sex ratios of the moss Plagiomnium affine (Bland.) T.Kop. in forests of contrasting age

Cronberg, Nils LU orcid ; Andersson, K ; Wyatt, R and Odrzykoski, I J (2003) In Journal of Bryology 25. p.155-162
Abstract
Six populations of the clonal forest floor moss Plagiomnium affine from forests of different age were screened for genetic variation at 23 allozyme loci, of which nine were polymorphic. Samples consisting of two adjacent unconnected shoots were taken at regular intervals along one transect from each population. A total of 602 shoots was analysed. Almost 80% of the shoots were sterile (i.e. not expressing male or female gender). Sex remained unknown for only 10% of shoots after identification of genets based on electrophoretic data. We identified a mean number of 3.7 fertile clones per population. The mean length of clones along transects in each population ranged between 2 and 3 in. The size distribution within populations was bimodal,... (More)
Six populations of the clonal forest floor moss Plagiomnium affine from forests of different age were screened for genetic variation at 23 allozyme loci, of which nine were polymorphic. Samples consisting of two adjacent unconnected shoots were taken at regular intervals along one transect from each population. A total of 602 shoots was analysed. Almost 80% of the shoots were sterile (i.e. not expressing male or female gender). Sex remained unknown for only 10% of shoots after identification of genets based on electrophoretic data. We identified a mean number of 3.7 fertile clones per population. The mean length of clones along transects in each population ranged between 2 and 3 in. The size distribution within populations was bimodal, with a few dominant clones and a varying number of much smaller clones. The overall sex ratio was slightly female biased at the ramet level, but balanced at the genet level. Forest age was negatively correlated with percentage of sterile shoots and positively correlated with frequency of sporophytes. In both cases correlations were significant only if population 1, which was subject to extreme soil disturbance by badgers, was excluded. We conclude that the effective population size is larger, and the susceptibility to genetic drift is lower, in old forests. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Journal of Bryology
volume
25
pages
155 - 162
publisher
Taylor & Francis
external identifiers
  • wos:000186239100001
  • scopus:1842473741
ISSN
1743-2820
DOI
10.1179/037366803235001625
project
Reproduction and within-species diversity in relation to habitat history
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
b9ef17b9-78e8-415f-a37a-6945f54f2483 (old id 137598)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 12:35:35
date last changed
2022-03-13 20:00:12
@article{b9ef17b9-78e8-415f-a37a-6945f54f2483,
  abstract     = {{Six populations of the clonal forest floor moss Plagiomnium affine from forests of different age were screened for genetic variation at 23 allozyme loci, of which nine were polymorphic. Samples consisting of two adjacent unconnected shoots were taken at regular intervals along one transect from each population. A total of 602 shoots was analysed. Almost 80% of the shoots were sterile (i.e. not expressing male or female gender). Sex remained unknown for only 10% of shoots after identification of genets based on electrophoretic data. We identified a mean number of 3.7 fertile clones per population. The mean length of clones along transects in each population ranged between 2 and 3 in. The size distribution within populations was bimodal, with a few dominant clones and a varying number of much smaller clones. The overall sex ratio was slightly female biased at the ramet level, but balanced at the genet level. Forest age was negatively correlated with percentage of sterile shoots and positively correlated with frequency of sporophytes. In both cases correlations were significant only if population 1, which was subject to extreme soil disturbance by badgers, was excluded. We conclude that the effective population size is larger, and the susceptibility to genetic drift is lower, in old forests.}},
  author       = {{Cronberg, Nils and Andersson, K and Wyatt, R and Odrzykoski, I J}},
  issn         = {{1743-2820}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{155--162}},
  publisher    = {{Taylor & Francis}},
  series       = {{Journal of Bryology}},
  title        = {{Clonal distribution, fertility and sex ratios of the moss Plagiomnium affine (Bland.) T.Kop. in forests of contrasting age}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/037366803235001625}},
  doi          = {{10.1179/037366803235001625}},
  volume       = {{25}},
  year         = {{2003}},
}