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Genetic diversity and population structure in the endangered tree Hopea hainanensis (Dipterocarpaceae) on Hainan Island, China
Author(s) -
Chen Wang,
Xiang Ma,
MingXun Ren,
Liang Tang
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0241452
Subject(s) - dipterocarpaceae , genetic diversity , biology , mantel test , population , endangered species , ecology , threatened species , genetic structure , habitat , demography , sociology
Hopea hainanensis Merrill & Chun (Dipterocarpaceae) is an endangered tree species restricted to Hainan Island, China and a small part of Northern Vietnam. On Hainan Island, it is an important indicator species for tropical forests. However, because of its highly valued timber, H . hainanensis has suffered from overexploitation, leading to a sharp population decline. To facilitate the conservation of this species, genetic diversity and population structure were assessed using 12 SSR markers for 10 populations sampled across Hainan Island. Compared to non-threatened Hopea species, H . hainanensis exhibited reduced overall genetic diversity and increased population differentiation (AMOVA: F ST = 0.23). Bayesian model-based clustering and principal coordinate analysis consistently assigned H . hainanensis individuals into three genetic groups, which were found to be widespread and overlapping geographically. A Mantel test found no correlation between genetic and geographical distances ( r = 0.040, p = 0.418). The observed genetic structure suggests that long-distance gene flow occurred among H . hainanensis populations prior to habitat fragmentation. A recent population bottleneck was revealed, which may cause rapid loss of genetic diversity and increased differentiation across populations. Based on these findings, appropriate strategies for the long-term conservation of the endangered species H . hainanensis are proposed.

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