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Allozyme diversity in endemic flowering plant species of the Juan Fernandez Archipelago, Chile: ecological and historical factors with implications for conservation

The level and apportionment of allozyme diversity were determined for 29 endemic (and 1 native) species from the Juan$Fern\acute {a}ndez$Islands, Chile. Mean diversities at the species level (Hes= 0.065) are low but comparable to those measured for other insular endemics in the Pacific. A high mean...

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Published in:American journal of botany 2001-12, Vol.88 (12), p.2195-2203
Main Authors: Crawford, Daniel J, Ruiz, Eduardo, Stuessy, Tod F, Tepe, Eric, Aqeveque, Pedro, Gonzalez, Fedelina, Jensen, Richard J, Anderson, Gregory J, Bernardello, Gabriel, Baeza, Carlos M, Swenson, Ulf, Silva O, Mario
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creator Crawford, Daniel J
Ruiz, Eduardo
Stuessy, Tod F
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Baeza, Carlos M
Swenson, Ulf
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description The level and apportionment of allozyme diversity were determined for 29 endemic (and 1 native) species from the Juan$Fern\acute {a}ndez$Islands, Chile. Mean diversities at the species level (Hes= 0.065) are low but comparable to those measured for other insular endemics in the Pacific. A high mean proportion (0.338) of species-level diversity resides among populations. Diversity statistics were compared for species in different ecological-life history trait categories and abundance classes. Species occurring in large populations and those present in scattered small populations have higher diversities than species occurring in one or two populations. Although not significant with the conservative statistical test employed, lower diversity was found in highly selfing species as compared to animal- or wind-pollinated species. The apportionment of genetic diversity within and among populations (GSTvalues) is not significantly different for any of the species categories. Of particular interest is the lack of difference between animal- and wind-pollinated species because previous analyses of large data sets showed higher differentiation between populations of animal- than wind-pollinated species. Historical factors, both ecological and phylogenetic in nature, can influence the level and apportionment of diversity within insular endemics, and thus ecological correlates of diversity seen in many continental species may not apply to endemics. The results have several conservation implications. The preservation of large populations or several small populations is important for conserving diversity within species because when species are reduced to one or two populations, allozyme diversity is sharply reduced. High mean GSTvalues for the species examined illustrate the need for conserving as many populations as possible, either in the wild or in the garden, to preserve maximal diversity within species. Effective conservation strategies require empirical knowledge of each species.
doi_str_mv 10.2307/3558381
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source Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection; Botanical Society of America; JSTOR Archival Journals
subjects allozymes
Biodiversity
Biodiversity conservation
Biological taxonomies
Botany
Conservation
Conservation biology
Diversity of citizenship
Endemic species
Flowers & plants
Genetic diversity
genetic variation
Juan Fernández Archipelago
Plants
Population Biology
Population ecology
rare species
Species
Species diversity
title Allozyme diversity in endemic flowering plant species of the Juan Fernandez Archipelago, Chile: ecological and historical factors with implications for conservation
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