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Pak. J. Bot., 44(3): 1047-1052, 2012. |
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Updated: 04-06-12 | ||||
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RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN GEOGRAPHIC PROXIMITY AND GENETIC SIMILARITY AMONG THE NATURAL POPULATIONS OF PINUS BRUTIA TEN.: ITS IMPLICATION ON GENETIC CONSERVATION
NURAY KAYA* AND BEHİYE BANU BİLGEN
Abstract:
Genetic variation in five natural populations of Pinus brutia
Ten., was determined with isoenzyme analyses. Isozymes from nine enzyme
systems extracted from haploid female gametophytes of the seeds were
separated by horizontal starch gel electrophoresis. In the nine enzyme
systems, 14 loci and 32 alleles were observed. The average proportion of
polymorphic loci for the populations ranged from 64.3% to 78.6%. The
average number of alleles per locus per populations was estimated 2.08
(± 0.2). The mean estimated expected-heterozygosity (He) of the
populations was 0.276. A rather high proportion of genetic variation
(95.8%) was due to within-population variation and the remaining (4.2%)
was due to variation among populations. The level of gene flow (Nm)
was 5.75 per generation. According to genetic variation parameters,
although there is no significant differentiation among population, the
populations in the western and central parts of Mediterranean region
(Muğla, Isparta and Mersin) have relatively more genetic variation than
populations in the eastern part. Therefore, these populations should be
given a high priority in forest tree breeding, selection and for in
situ conservation studies in the region. Biology Department, Faculty of Science, Akdeniz University, 07058 Antalya, Turkey *Corresponding author: nkaya@akdeniz.edu.tr |
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