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Evaluating restoration outcomes through assessment of pollen dispersal, mating system, and genetic diversity

Authors :
Margaret Byrne
Justin Jonson
David J. Coates
Melissa A. Millar
Siegfried L. Krauss
Stephen D. Hopper
Source :
Restoration Ecology. 29
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Ecological genetics can provide a novel contribution to assessing the achievement of restoration objectives. We used paternity assignment to infer realized pollen dispersal within, and pollen immigration into, a restoration population of Hakea nitida, a common near‐coastal shrub or small tree in southwest Australia. We compared mating system parameters and genetic diversity with a nearby remnant reference population and assessed genetic divergence among the restoration and reference populations. We found realized pollen dispersal events closely tracked the frequency distributions of the distances between all plants within the restoration focus area. Mean realized pollen dispersal distance (359 m) approached the mean of the distances between all plants (407 m), far exceeding mean nearest neighbor distance (12 m). Maximum realized pollen dispersal distance (869 m) approached the maximum distance between all plants in the study area (1,033 m). Pollen immigration into the restoration study area was limited (4%). The mating system revealed moderate outcrossing rates (tₘ = 0.861 restoration and tₘ = 0.745 reference population), with significant and similar biparental inbreeding (tₘ − tₛ = 0.180, tₘ− tₛ = 0.186) but greater correlated paternity (rₚₘ) in the restoration (0.519) than in the reference (0.188) population. Genetic divergence among the restoration and reference remnant population was moderate (FST = 0.094, DST = 0.239). Patterns of pollen dispersal and mating system parameters imply the attraction of pollinators within the restoration population as a key factor in progressing towards the establishment of self‐sustaining populations.

Details

ISSN :
1526100X and 10612971
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Restoration Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........81ad947978bc498c8e101a652bedeba2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/rec.13335