Integrating population demography, genetics and self-incompatibility in a viability assessment of the Wee Jasper Grevillea (Grevillea iaspicula McGill., Proteaceae)
Authored by Peter H Thrall, Andrew G Young, Susan E Hoebee
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.1007/s10592-007-9366-3
Sponsors:
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Grevillea iaspicula is an endangered shrub known from only eight small
populations (< 250 individuals) in south-eastern Australia. The species
is threatened by combined ecological and genetic factors, e.g. land
conversion, weed invasion, low recruitment and low gene flow among
populations. The populations also show large variance in male fitness
and limited mate availability which are thought to arise as a
consequence of gametophytic self-incompatibility (GSI). This study has
used an individual-based, spatially explicit simulation model to explore
the interaction between GSI and mate limitation in this species, as well
as its effect on long-term population viability. The model was
parameterised with demographic and genetic data obtained from 2 years of
population monitoring. Simulation results identified extremely low
establishment rates as the most critical factor currently influencing
the persistence of G. iaspicula populations and indicated that the
extant populations are at serious risk of extinction in the near future
unless this is altered by, at very least, an order of magnitude higher.
SI was shown to affect the magnitude of variation in establishment but
this effect was masked when establishment was critically low.
Disassortative mating, owing to low allelic richness at the S-locus, had
the negative demographic effect of restricting mating to relatively few
compatible plants. Restricted mate availability imposed additional
limitations to the viability of populations but, given a 20-fold
increase in establishment rate, population fluctuations stabilised. The
long-term viability of G. iaspicula is bleak without artificial
augmentation of the populations but management planning must also
consider genetic processes, including SI, to ensure such strategies
optimise the benefits gained.
Tags
Size
Ranunculus-reptans
Inbreeding depression
Cross-compatibility
Aster-furcatus asteraceae
Stored seed-bank
Breeding system
Barklyana
proteaceae
Ziziphus-celata
Endemic plant