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Low impact of present and historical landscape configuration on the genetics of fragmented Anthyllis vulneraria populations
Authors:Olivier Honnay  Els Coart  Dries Adriaens  Isabel Roldán-Ruiz
Institution:a University of Leuven, Biology Department, Division of Plant Ecology and Systematics, Kasteelpark Arenberg 31, B-3001 Heverlee, Belgium
b Agricultural Research Center, Department of Plant Genetics and Breeding (CLO-DvP), Caritasstraat 21, B-9090 Melle, Belgium
c University of Leuven, Laboratory for Forest, Nature and Landscape Research, Vital Decosterstraat 102, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium
Abstract:Decreasing habitat fragment area and increasing isolation may cause loss of plant population genetic diversity and increased genetic differentiation between populations. We studied the relation between the historical and the present landscape configuration (i.e., patch area and patch connectivity), and the present management of calcareous grassland fragments on the one hand, and the within and between population genetic structure of 18 Anthyllis vulneraria populations on the other hand. Despite the long-time fragmentation history and the mainly selfing breeding system of the species, we detected very low genetic differentiation (Φst = 0.056) among habitat fragments and no significant isolation-by-distance relation. Average within fragment genetic diversity measured as molecular variance and expected heterozygosity, were relatively high (16.46 and 0.28, respectively), and weakly positively correlated with the current fragment area, most likely because larger fragments contained larger populations. We found no effects of the historical landscape configuration on the genetic diversity of the populations. Our data suggest that the consequences of habitat fragmentation for genetic differentiation and genetic diversity of A. vulneraria are relatively minor which is very likely due to the historical high levels of seed exchange among fragments through grazing and roaming livestock. This study provides indirect evidence that nature management by grazing not only positively affects habitat quality but that it might also mitigate the genetic consequences of habitat fragmentation. From the conservation point of view, this study illustrates the importance of grazing and of the regular transport of livestock between fragments to prevent the long-term effects of fragmentation on the genetic diversity of the populations studied.
Keywords:AFLP  Historical landscape  Genetic differentiation  Gene flow  Grazing management  Landscape connectivity
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