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Population genetic structure of the polypore Datronia caperata in fragmented mangrove forests. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Datronia caperata is a prominent fungus in neotropical mangrove forests, specifically associated with the Laguncularia racemosa tree.
  • Researchers studied the genetic diversity of D. caperata in four Panamanian mangrove forests using AFLP markers, finding that 98.6% of the genetic loci examined were polymorphic.
  • Although the fungus produces many spores for long-distance dispersal, the study revealed high genetic variation among populations, indicating that habitat fragmentation may lead to genetic isolation despite potential for dispersal.

Article Abstract

Datronia caperata, a basidiomycete fungus, is one of the dominant polypore species found in neotropical mangrove forest fragments, where it is locally specialized on Laguncularia racemosa. We examined the genetic structure of D. caperata populations from four Panamanian mangrove forests using AFLP markers. Using five primer pair combinations, 145 loci were detected, 98.6% of which were polymorphic. Each of the populations showed a high degree of genetic diversity (Nei's h ranging from 0.146 to 0.223). Results from minimum spanning trees and Mantel tests showed little evidence for small-scale spatial structure within sites. A significant amount of total genetic variation was partitioned among populations (phi(ST) = 0.21) separated by 10s to 100s of km, a considerably greater amount than has been detected in other mushroom and wood-decaying fungi sampled at equal or greater geographic distances. These results suggest that despite production of copious basidiospores capable of long distance dispersal, some homobasidiomycete fungi may be susceptible to genetic isolation due to habitat fragmentation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0953756204009773DOI Listing

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