Antarctic Science

  • Antarctic Science (2009), 21 : pp 51-58
  • Copyright © Antarctic Science Ltd 2009
  • DOI: 10.1017/S0954102008001466 (About DOI)
  • Published online: 10 June 2008
Cambridge Journals Online - CUP Full-Text Page
Antarctic Science (2009), 21:51-58 Cambridge University Press
Copyright © Antarctic Science Ltd 2009
doi:10.1017/S0954102008001466

Biological Science

Genetic structure of East Antarctic populations of the moss Ceratodon purpureus


Laurence J. Clarkea1 c1, David J. Ayrea1 and Sharon A. Robinsona1

a1 Institute for Conservation Biology, University of Wollongong, NSW 2522, Australia
Article author query
clarke lj [PubMed]  [Google Scholar]
ayre dj [PubMed]  [Google Scholar]
robinson sa [PubMed]  [Google Scholar]

Abstract

The capacity of the polar flora to adapt is of increasing concern given current and predicted environmental change in these regions. Previous genetic studies of Antarctic mosses have been of limited value due to a lack of variation in the markers or non-specificity of the methods used. We examined the power of five microsatellite loci developed for the cosmopolitan moss Ceratodon purpureus to detect genetically distinct clones and infer the distribution of clones within and among populations from the Windmill Islands, East Antarctica. Our microsatellite data suggest that the extraordinarily high levels of variation reported in RAPD studies were artificially elevated by the presence of contaminants. We found surprisingly little contribution of asexual reproduction to the genetic structure of the Windmill Islands populations, but more loci are required to determine the distribution of individual clones within and among populations. It is apparent that Antarctic populations of C. purpureus possess less genetic diversity than temperate populations, and thus have less capacity for adaptive change in response to environmental variation, but more markers are needed to resolve the total genetic diversity in Antarctic C. purpureus and other mosses.

(Received December 17 2007)

(Accepted March 18 2008)

Key wordsbryophytes; clonal diversity; dispersal; microsatellites; RAPDs; Windmill Islands

Correspondence:

c1 ljc03@uow.edu.au


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