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Genome Size is Negatively Correlated with Altitude in Natural Populations ofDactylis glomerata
Author(s) -
Glenn Reeves
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
annals of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.567
H-Index - 176
eISSN - 1095-8290
pISSN - 0305-7364
DOI - 10.1006/anbo.1998.0751
Subject(s) - cline (biology) , biology , altitude (triangle) , transect , genome , genome size , population , natural population growth , genetic variation , genetics , ecology , evolutionary biology , gene , demography , geometry , mathematics , sociology
Previously, we found a significant negative correlation between DNA C-value and altitude among eight natural populations of Dactylis glomerata L. (Creber et al., New Phytologist 128: 555-561, 1994). We have examined the extent to which similar negative relationships exist in other altitudinal transects, one in southern France and the other in Italy. Using Feulgen microdensitometry, C-values were negatively correlated with altitude both for the French and Italian populations. A combined plot of DNA C-values against altitude for all of the transects (representing C-values for 17 natural populations), exhibited a highly significant negative relationship; there was a 13-fold variation in DNA C-value from the largest genome-lowest altitude to the smallest genome-highest altitude natural population. Such a consistent marked altitudinal dine suggests strong nucleotypic selection acting upon these populations with increasing altitude. Preliminary examination of amplified fragment length polymorphisms between populations selected from the upper and lower limits of the French and Italian transects has shown that these populations are genetically distinct. The extent to which this genetic separation is related to altitude or genome size, or both, is discussed. © 1998 Annals of Botany Company

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