Spatial scales of genetic structure and gene flow in Calochortus albus (Liliaceae).

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION(2013)

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Abstract
Calochortus (Liliaceae) displays high species richness, restriction of many individual taxa to narrow ranges, geographic coherence of individual clades, and parallel adaptive radiations in different regions. Here we test the first part of a hypothesis that all of these patterns may reflect gene flow at small geographic scales. We use amplified fragment length polymorphism variation to quantify the geographic scales of spatial genetic structure and apparent gene flow in Calochortus albus, a widespread member of the genus, at Henry Coe State Park in the Coast Ranges south of San Francisco Bay. Analyses of 254 mapped individuals spaced 0.001-14.4km apart show a highly significant decline in genetic identity with ln distance, implying a root-mean-square distance of gene flow sigma of 5-43m. STRUCTURE analysis implies the existence of 2-4 clusters over the study area, with frequent reversals among clusters over short distances (<200m) and a relatively high frequency of admixture within individuals at most sampling sites. While the intensity of spatial genetic structure in C. albus is weak, as measured by the Sp statistic, that appears to reflect low genetic identity of adjacent plants, which might reflect repeated colonizations at small spatial scales or density-dependent mortality of individual genotypes by natural enemies. Small spatial scales of gene flow and spatial genetic structure should permit, under a variety of conditions, genetic differentiation within species at such scales, setting the stage ultimately for speciation and adaptive radiation as such scales as well.
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Key words
Endemism,parallel adaptive radiations,spatial genetic structure,species richness
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