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Publications [#230598] of A. Jonathan Shaw

Papers Published

  1. Ramaiya, M; Johnson, MG; Shaw, B; Heinrichs, J; Hentschel, J; von Konrat, M; Davison, PG; Shaw, AJ, Morphologically cryptic biological species within the liverwort Frullania asagrayana., American journal of botany, vol. 97 no. 10 (October, 2010), pp. 1707-1718, ISSN 0002-9122 [21616804], [doi]
    (last updated on 2024/04/24)

    Abstract:

    Unlabelled

    Premise of the study

    The Frullania tamarisci complex includes eight Holarctic liverwort species. One of these, F. asagrayana, is distributed broadly throughout eastern North America from Canada to the Gulf Coast. Preliminary genetic data suggested that the species includes two groups of populations. This study was designed to test whether the two groups are reproductively isolated biological species. •

    Methods

    Eighty-eight samples from across the range of F. asagrayana, plus 73 samples from one population, were genotyped for 13 microsatellite loci. Sequences for two plastid loci and nrITS were obtained from 13 accessions. Genetic data were analyzed using coalescent models and Bayesian inference. •

    Key results

    Frullania asagrayana is sequence-invariant at the two plastid loci and ITS2, but two clear groups were resolved by microsatellites. The two groups are largely reproductively isolated, but there is a low level of gene flow from the southern to the northern group. No gene flow was detected in the other direction. A local population was heterogeneous but displayed strong genetic structure. •

    Conclusions

    The genetic structure of F. asagrayana in eastern North America reflects morphologically cryptic differentiation between reproductively isolated groups of populations, near-panmixis within groups, and clonal propagation at local scales. Reproductive isolation between groups that are invariant at the level of nucleotide sequences shows that caution must be exercised in making taxonomic and evolutionary inferences from reciprocal monophyly (or lack thereof) between putative species.

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