Inter-annual maintenance of the fine-scale genetic structure in a biennial plant
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Valverde Morillas, Javier; Gómez, José María; García, Cristina; Sharbel, Timothy F; Jiménez Morales, María Noelia; Perfectti Álvarez, FranciscoEditorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2016-11-24Referencia bibliográfica
Valverde, J., Gómez, J., García, C. et al. Inter-annual maintenance of the fine-scale genetic structure in a biennial plant. Sci Rep 6, 37712 (2016). [https://doi.org/10.1038/srep37712]
Patrocinador
Grants from the Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (CGL2009-07015, CGL2012–34736, CGL2013-47558-P), including EU-FEDER funds, and Plan Andaluz de Investigación (P11-RNM-7676) supported this study; Fellowship (BES-2010- 030067) from MINECO; FCT Investigador Programme and co-funded by the European Program COMPETE: FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-019772 and FCT-ANR/BIA-BIC/0010/2013Resumen
Within plant populations, space-restricted gene movement, together with environmental heterogeneity, can result in a spatial variation in gene frequencies. In biennial plants, inter-annual flowering migrants can homogenize gene frequencies between consecutive cohorts. However, the actual impact of these migrants on spatial genetic variation remains unexplored. Here, we used 10 nuclear microsatellite and one plastid genetic marker to characterize the spatial genetic structure within two consecutive cohorts in a population of the biennial plant Erysimum mediohispanicum (Brassicaceae). We explored the maintenance of this structure between consecutive flowering cohorts at different levels of complexity, and investigated landscape effects on gene flow. We found that cohorts were not genetically differentiated and showed a spatial genetic structure defined by a negative genetic-spatial correlation at fine scale that varied in intensity with compass directions. This spatial genetic structure was maintained when comparing plants from different cohorts. Additionally, genotypes were consistently associated with environmental factors such as light availability and soil composition, but to a lesser extent compared with the spatial autocorrelation. We conclude that inter-annual migrants, in combination with limited seed dispersal and environmental heterogeneity, play a major role in shaping and maintaining the spatial genetic structure among cohorts in this biennial plant.





