Forests (Jan 2020)

Genetic Structure of Norway Spruce Ecotypes Studied by SSR Markers

  • Zuzana Bínová,
  • Jiří Korecký,
  • Jakub Dvořák,
  • Jan Bílý,
  • Dagmar Zádrapová,
  • Václav Jansa,
  • Milan Lstibůrek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/f11010110
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. 110

Abstract

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Norway spruce is a widespread and economically highly important tree species in Central Europe which occurs there in different morphotypic forms (also known as ecotypes). Previously established common garden experiments indicated that the morphological differentiation is most likely genetically determined. The genetic structure of Norway spruce morphological variants might be an indicator (marker) of specific sustainability in forest ecosystems. In this study, we investigated 436 individuals from autochthonous populations belonging to three different ecotypes. The main aim was to evaluate a level of genetic intra and interpopulation diversity among the low, medium and high-elevation ecotypes using both expressed sequence tag simple sequence repeats (EST − SSR) and genomic SSR markers. Sixteen highly polymorphic microsatellite loci folded in two newly designed multiplexes were used to depicture the genetic structure of targeted trees. Important allele frequency parameters, such as the mean expected (0.722, SE = 0.061) and observed (0.585, SE = 0.062) heterozygosity and mean effective number of alleles (Ne = 5.943, SE = 1.279), were estimated. The low genetic differentiation detected among different ecotypes (Fst = 0.008) was further discussed and clarified.

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