Samples of two duckweed species, and , were collected around small ponds and investigated concerning the question of whether natural populations of duckweeds constitute a single clone, or whether clonal diversity exists. Amplified fragment length polymorphism was used as a molecular method to distinguish clones of the same species. Possible intraspecific diversity was evaluated by average-linkage clustering. The main criterion to distinguish one clone from another was the 95% significance level of the Jaccard dissimilarity index for replicated samples. Within natural populations of , significant intraspecific genetic differences were detected. In each of the three small ponds harbouring populations of . , based on twelve samples, between four and nine distinct clones were detected. Natural populations of consist of a mixture of several clones representing intraspecific biodiversity in an aquatic ecosystem. Moreover, identical distinct clones were discovered in more than one pond, located at a distance of 1 km and 2.4 km from each other. Evidently, fronds of were transported between these different ponds. The genetic differences for , however, were below the error-threshold of the method within a pond to detect distinct clones, but were pronounced between samples of two different ponds.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9003317PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants11070968DOI Listing

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