Modelling the effects of genetics and habitat on the demography of a grassland herb
Authored by Pedro F Quintana-Ascencio, F Xavier Pico, Mikael Milden, Johan Ehrlen, Ian Pfingsten
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.baae.2008.02.006
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Abstract
There is growing evidence that genetic and ecological factors interact
in determining Population persistence. The demographic effects of
inbreeding depression can largely depend on the ecological milieu. We
used demographic data of the perennial herb Succisa pratensis from six
populations in grazed and ungrazed sites with different soil moisture.
We built an individual-based model assessing the demographic
consequences of inbreeding depression in populations with different
management and habitat. Today this plant has to cope with severe
landscape fragmentation, deteriorating habitat conditions in terms of
decreasing grazing intensity, and the effects of inbreeding depression.
For each population we performed simulations testing two inbreeding
depression hypotheses (partial dominance and overdominance) and three
epistatic functions among loci. The results indicated stronger
inbreeding depression effects for populations in Unfavourable sites
without grazing or in xeric habitats compared to populations in
favourable mesic sites with grazing. Overall, we found stronger effects
with overdominance, a result that emphasizes the importance of
understanding the genetic mechanisms of inbreeding depression. Hence, management practices can interact with the genetic consequences of
inbreeding depression in population dynamics, which may have important
implications for plant population ecology and evolutionary dynamics of
inbreeding depression. (C) 2008 Gesellschaft fur Okologie. Published by
Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.
Tags
Landscape
fitness
Population-dynamics
Extinction
Biology
Deleterious mutations
Components
Inbreeding depression
Succisa-pratensis
Plant conservation