Population Genetic Structure and Reproductive Strategy of the Introduced Grass Centotheca lappacea in Tropical LandUse Systems in Sumatra
Date
2016-01-25Author
HODAC, Ladislav
ULUM, Fuad Bahrul
OPFERMANN, Nicole
BREIDENBACH, Natalie
HOJSGAARD, Diego
TJITROSOEDIRDJO, Sri Sudarmiyati
VORNAM, Barbara
FINKELDEY, Reiner
HORANDI, Elvira
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Intensive transformation of lowland rainforest into oil palm and rubber monocultures is the
most common land-use practice in Sumatra (Indonesia), accompanied by invasion of weeds.
In the Jambi province, Centotheca lappacea is one of the most abundant alien grass species
in plantations and in jungle rubber (an extensively used agroforest), but largely missing in natural rainforests. Here, we investigated putative genetic differentiation and signatures for adaptation in the introduced area. We studied reproductive mode and ploidy level as putative
factors for invasiveness of the species. We sampled 19 populations in oil palm and rubber
monocultures and in jungle rubber in two regions (Bukit Duabelas and Harapan). Amplified
fragment length polymorphisms (AFLP) revealed a high diversity of individual genotypes and
only a weak differentiation among populations (FST = 0.173) and between the two regions
(FST = 0.065). There was no significant genetic differentiation between the three land-use systems. The metapopulation of C. lappacea consists of five genetic partitions with high levels of
admixture; all partitions appeared in both regions, but with different proportions. Within the
Bukit Duabelas region we observed significant isolation-by-distance. Nine AFLP loci (5.3% of
all loci) were under natural diversifying selection. All studied populations of C. lappacea were
diploid, outcrossing and self-incompatible, without any hints of apomixis. The estimated residence time of c. 100 years coincides with the onset of rubber and oil palm planting in Sumatra.
In the colonization process, the species is already in a phase of establishment, which may be
enhanced by efficient selection acting on a highly diverse gene pool. In the land-use systems,
seed dispersal might be enhanced by adhesive spikelets. At present, the abundance of established populations in intensively managed land-use systems might provide opportunities for
rapid dispersal of C. lappacea across rural landscapes in Sumatra, while the invasion potential in rainforest ecosystems appears to be moderate as long as they remain undisturbed.
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- LSP-Jurnal Ilmiah Dosen [7300]