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Climate, Colonisation and Celibacy: Population Structure in Central European Trichomanes speciosum (Pteridophyta)
Author(s) -
Rumsey F. J.,
Vogel J. C.,
Russell S. J.,
Barrett J. A.,
Gibby Mary
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
botanica acta
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.871
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1438-8677
pISSN - 0932-8629
DOI - 10.1111/j.1438-8677.1998.tb00736.x
Subject(s) - colonisation , sporophyte , biological dispersal , biology , fern , bryophyte , ecology , population , moss , botany , colonization , demography , sociology
The Killarney fern Trichomanes speciosum Willd. (Hymenophyllaceae) is unique in possessing both extensive sexual (sporophyte and gametophyte generations present) and asexual (gametophyte only) ranges. It was first discovered in central Europe in 1993 and is represented in this area only by its perennial, vegetatively propagating gametophyte generation. Genetic variation has been investigated at 35 sites. Allozyme diversity is partitioned primarily between, not within, sites. Although genetic variation exists at a fine scale (lt 5 m) within some populations, the results suggest that clones were not intimately associated in these cases. The majority of sites support unique multilocus phenotypes. Where phenotypes were present at more than one site they tended to recur at the next closest site. However, similar phenotypes link eastern and western Pfälzerwald sites up to c. 70 km apart. This pattern of diversity suggests that colonisation was not solely of a “stepping stone” or “leading edge” type. We suggest that during a climatically favourable period, probably the Atlantic hypsithermal, there may have been an explosive colonisation by long‐distance dispersal from refugial areas. This was followed by a short period during which sporophyte production, sexual reproduction and local spread were possible. With climatic change, reduction in the available habitat and the loss of the sporophyte generation, different individual genets became fixed within small, favourable, but scattered, sites. The possibility that some central European sites north of the Alps acted as periglacial refugia cannot be discounted, but would appear less likely than (re‐) colonisation from the Atlantic fringe.