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RAPD

About: RAPD is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 15960 publications have been published within this topic receiving 360391 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Assessment of genetic variation using DNA markers within and between populations of Fitzroya cupressoides indicated that there is a significant degree of variation within each population, and did not provide evidence for genetic ‘bottleneck’ effects within the species.
Abstract: Fitzroya cupressoides (alerce, Cupressaceae) is a large and exceptionally long-lived conifer, endemic to a restricted area of southern Chile and neighbouring areas of Argentina. As a result of its high economic value, the species has been severely exploited for timber, and remnant populations are fragmented and often highly disturbed. The species is thought to have undergone a major range contraction during the last glaciation. In order to assess the extent of genetic variation using DNA markers within and between populations of this species, samples were obtained from throughout the natural range and analysed for random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) variation. Eight 10-mer and three 15-mer primers were used to produce a total of 54 polymorphic bands. Shannon's diversity estimates were calculated to provide an estimate of the degree of variation within each population. Values varied from 0.343 to 0.636 with only the lowest value differing significantly from the others (Spop= 0.547). This indicated that there is a significant degree of variation within each population, and did not provide evidence for genetic ‘bottleneck’ effects within the species. A pairwise distance measure calculated from the RAPD data was used as an input for principal coordinate (PCO) and amova analyses. The first three principal coordinates of RAPD distances described 8.3, 5.9 and 5.4% of the total variance, respectively, and a degree of clustering of samples according to their geographical origin was detectable. amova analysis indicated that although most of the variation (85.6%) was found within populations, a significant proportion (P < 0.002) was attributable to differences between populations. An upgma dendrogram constructed using ΦST values derived from amova produced a pattern broadly similar to that produced by the PCO, highlighting differences between three main groups of populations within Chile: those from the northern Coastal Range, the southern Coastal Range and Central Depression, and the Andes. Populations from Argentina also emerged as significantly different from those in Chile. These results are interpreted in the context of the postglacial history of the species, and their implications for the development of conservation strategies for Fitzroya are discussed.

154 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that occasional sexual reproduction as well as clonal migration via bulbil dispersal play a significant role in the treeless arctic environment, where S. cernua is widespread and locally very abundant.
Abstract: Arctic plants in general and arctic clonal plants in particular have often been assumed to contain low levels of genetic diversity. We used RAPDs (random amplified polymorphic DNAs) to investigate genetic diversity in the arctic-alpine Saxifraga cernua, which mainly reproduces clonally via bulbils, at three spatial scales in Svalbard: (i) ‘macroscale’, between two sites 11 km apart; (ii) ‘mesoscale’, along two crossing transects at each site; and (iii) ‘microscale’, within a 3 × 3 m square at each site. Thirteen putative clones (RAPD phenotypes) were distinguished among 93 ramets based on 38 RAPD markers. The genetic diversity (D; mean 0.52, range 0.10–0.81) and evenness (E; mean 0.42, range 0.00–0.82) were at the same level as in clonal plants in general. However, the diversity strongly depended on site and spatial scale. Several clones were highly divergent and clustered independently of site in UPGMA and PCO analyses. In an analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA), most of the variation (59%) was found within sites. Mantel tests revealed no correlation between spatial and genetic distance within sites. Our results suggest that occasional sexual reproduction as well as clonal migration via bulbil dispersal play a significant role in the treeless arctic environment, where S. cernua is widespread and locally very abundant. In contrast, Bauert et al. (Molecular Ecology 7, 1519–1527) found no genetic variation within populations or regions of the Alps, where the species has highly isolated occurrences.

154 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The DNA of this type of mobile elements is evolving faster than the DNA of other markers in this clonal lineage, and two geographical distant groups have evolved in agreement with polymorphisms based on IRAP markers anchored to at least, two different Copia-like retrotransposon sequences.

154 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: RAPD markers showed to be a useful tool for studying the genetic diversity of pomegranate and showed the goodness of fit of the dendrogram.

153 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
2023149
2022309
2021152
2020195
2019246