Population genetic structure of Venezuelan chiropterophilous columnar cacti (Cactaceae).

Am J Bot

Centro de Ecología, Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas, Apdo. Postal 21827, Caracas 1020-A, Venezuela;

Published: November 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examined the genetic diversity of three bat-pollinated columnar cacti species in Venezuela, specifically analyzing two diploid and one tetraploid species through allozyme surveys.
  • High genetic diversity was found in both diploid and tetraploid species, indicating that bat-mediated gene dispersal plays a significant role in enhancing genetic variation within cactus populations.
  • The research showed low genetic differentiation among populations at various spatial scales, suggesting that gene exchange between populations is occurring primarily due to the distances separating them.

Article Abstract

We conducted allozyme surveys of three Venezuelan self-incompatible chiropterophilous columnar cacti: two diploid species, Stenocereus griseus and Cereus repandus, and one tetraploid, Pilosocereus lanuginosus. The three cacti are pollinated by bats, and both bats and birds disperse seeds. Population sampling comprised two spatial scales: all Venezuelan arid zones (macrogeographic) and two arid regions in northwestern Venezuela (regional). Ten to 15 populations and 17-23 loci were analyzed per species. Estimates of genetic diversity were compared with those of other allozyme surveys in the Cactaceae to examine how bat-mediated gene dispersal affects the population genetic attributes of the three cacti. Genetic diversity was high for both diploid (P(s) = 94.1-100, P(p) = 56.7-72.3, H(s) = 0.182-0.242, H(p) = 0.161-0.205) and tetraploid (P(s) = 93.1, P(p) = 76.1, H(s) = 0.274, H(p) = 0.253) species. Within-population heterozygote deficit was detected in the three cacti at macrogeographic (F(IS) = 0.145-0.182) and regional (F(IS) = 0.057-0.174) levels. Low genetic differentiation was detected at both macrogeographic (G(ST) = 0.043-0.126) and regional (G(ST) = 0.009-0.061) levels for the three species, suggesting substantial gene flow among populations. Gene exchange among populations seems to be regulated by distance among populations. Our results support the hypothesis that bat-mediated gene dispersal confers high levels of genetic exchange among populations of the three columnar cacti, a process that enhances levels of genetic diversity within their populations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3732/ajb.90.11.1628DOI Listing

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