Relationships between population density, fine-scale genetic structure, mating system and pollen dispersal in a timber tree from African rainforest

Owing to the reduction of population density and/or the environmental changes it induces, selective logging could affect the demography, reproductive biology and evolutionary potential of forest trees. This is particularly relevant in tropical forests where natural population densities can be low an...

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Autores principales: Duminil, J., Dainou, K., Kaviriri, D.K., Gillet, P., Loo, J., Doucet, J.L., Hardy, Olivier J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/70956
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author Duminil, J.
Dainou, K.
Kaviriri, D.K.
Gillet, P.
Loo, J.
Doucet, J.L.
Hardy, Olivier J.
author_browse Dainou, K.
Doucet, J.L.
Duminil, J.
Gillet, P.
Hardy, Olivier J.
Kaviriri, D.K.
Loo, J.
author_facet Duminil, J.
Dainou, K.
Kaviriri, D.K.
Gillet, P.
Loo, J.
Doucet, J.L.
Hardy, Olivier J.
author_sort Duminil, J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Owing to the reduction of population density and/or the environmental changes it induces, selective logging could affect the demography, reproductive biology and evolutionary potential of forest trees. This is particularly relevant in tropical forests where natural population densities can be low and isolated trees may be subject to outcross pollen limitation and/or produce low-quality selfed seeds that exhibit inbreeding depression. Comparing reproductive biology processes and genetic diversity of populations at different densities can provide indirect evidence of the potential impacts of logging. Here, we analysed patterns of genetic diversity, mating system and gene flow in three Central African populations of the self-compatible legume timber species Erythrophleum suaveolens with contrasting densities (0.11, 0.68 and 1.72 adults per ha). The comparison of inbreeding levels among cohorts suggests that selfing is detrimental as inbred individuals are eliminated between seedling and adult stages. Levels of genetic diversity, selfing rates (~16%) and patterns of spatial genetic structure (Sp ~0.006) were similar in all three populations. However, the extent of gene dispersal differed markedly among populations: the average distance of pollen dispersal increased with decreasing density (from 200 m in the high-density population to 1000 m in the low-density one). Overall, our results suggest that the reproductive biology and genetic diversity of the species are not affected by current logging practices. However, further investigations need to be conducted in low-density populations to evaluate (1) whether pollen limitation may reduce seed production and (2) the regeneration potential of the species.
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spelling CGSpace709562025-11-12T05:49:28Z Relationships between population density, fine-scale genetic structure, mating system and pollen dispersal in a timber tree from African rainforest Duminil, J. Dainou, K. Kaviriri, D.K. Gillet, P. Loo, J. Doucet, J.L. Hardy, Olivier J. population density forest trees reproduction gene flow genetic variation pollen logging Owing to the reduction of population density and/or the environmental changes it induces, selective logging could affect the demography, reproductive biology and evolutionary potential of forest trees. This is particularly relevant in tropical forests where natural population densities can be low and isolated trees may be subject to outcross pollen limitation and/or produce low-quality selfed seeds that exhibit inbreeding depression. Comparing reproductive biology processes and genetic diversity of populations at different densities can provide indirect evidence of the potential impacts of logging. Here, we analysed patterns of genetic diversity, mating system and gene flow in three Central African populations of the self-compatible legume timber species Erythrophleum suaveolens with contrasting densities (0.11, 0.68 and 1.72 adults per ha). The comparison of inbreeding levels among cohorts suggests that selfing is detrimental as inbred individuals are eliminated between seedling and adult stages. Levels of genetic diversity, selfing rates (~16%) and patterns of spatial genetic structure (Sp ~0.006) were similar in all three populations. However, the extent of gene dispersal differed markedly among populations: the average distance of pollen dispersal increased with decreasing density (from 200 m in the high-density population to 1000 m in the low-density one). Overall, our results suggest that the reproductive biology and genetic diversity of the species are not affected by current logging practices. However, further investigations need to be conducted in low-density populations to evaluate (1) whether pollen limitation may reduce seed production and (2) the regeneration potential of the species. 2016-03 2016-02-08T11:08:15Z 2016-02-08T11:08:15Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/70956 en Open Access application/pdf Springer Duminil, J.; Dainou, K.; Kaviriri, D.K.; Gillet, P.; Loo, J.; Doucet, J.L.; Hardy, O.J. (2016) Relationships between population density, fine-scale genetic structure, mating system and pollen dispersal in a timber tree from African rainforest. Heredity 116(3) p. 295–303 ISSN: 0018-067X
spellingShingle population density
forest trees
reproduction
gene flow
genetic variation
pollen
logging
Duminil, J.
Dainou, K.
Kaviriri, D.K.
Gillet, P.
Loo, J.
Doucet, J.L.
Hardy, Olivier J.
Relationships between population density, fine-scale genetic structure, mating system and pollen dispersal in a timber tree from African rainforest
title Relationships between population density, fine-scale genetic structure, mating system and pollen dispersal in a timber tree from African rainforest
title_full Relationships between population density, fine-scale genetic structure, mating system and pollen dispersal in a timber tree from African rainforest
title_fullStr Relationships between population density, fine-scale genetic structure, mating system and pollen dispersal in a timber tree from African rainforest
title_full_unstemmed Relationships between population density, fine-scale genetic structure, mating system and pollen dispersal in a timber tree from African rainforest
title_short Relationships between population density, fine-scale genetic structure, mating system and pollen dispersal in a timber tree from African rainforest
title_sort relationships between population density fine scale genetic structure mating system and pollen dispersal in a timber tree from african rainforest
topic population density
forest trees
reproduction
gene flow
genetic variation
pollen
logging
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/70956
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