Published May 29, 2021 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Outcrossing mating system of the early-divergent moonwort fern (Botrychium lunaria, Ophioglossaceae) revealed in the European Alps

  • 1. Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research
  • 2. University of Neuchâtel
  • 3. Iowa State University

Description

Premise of the Research. Vascular plants depend on sexual recombination for generating new genetic variability to meet environmental needs. Nevertheless, members of the early-divergent fern genus Botrychium (Ophioglossaceae) typically maintain gametophytic selfing and show strong inbreeding within populations. To explain this evolutionary anomaly, the existence of previous or current but undiscovered outcrossing, genetically rich, precursors of the existing genetically depauperate taxa has been hypothesized. 

Methodology. Using allele expression at thirteen independently assorting enzyme loci, we compared allelic diversity and levels of heterozygosity in 471 Botrychium lunaria individuals across sixteen populations in the Alps and Jura Mountains of Switzerland. We examined habitat characteristics influencing mating systems and investigated population genetic structure based on a discriminant analysis of principal components and a graph-theoretic framework. We tested the pattern of isolation by distance and explored the biological processes favoring or limiting spore dispersal at a regional scale.

Pivotal Results. We found high genetic diversity within and among populations, and similar observed (HO) and expected heterozygosity (HS) across loci (HO = 0.020-0.450 and HS = 0.040-0.590, respectively). Estimates of HO(0.050-0.272) were lower than HS (0.144-0.305) across individuals, indicating a weak deficit in heterozygotes. Mean values of departure (D) from expected heterozygosity were close to what would be expected with random mating (DL = 0.061 and DP = 0.059 across loci and populations, respectively). The mean inbreeding coefficient was low (FIS = 0.247) and the overall genetic differentiation was moderate (global FST = 0.083).

Conclusions. Together, the discriminant analysis of principal components and the Population Graph revealed a complex population genetic structure and a weak genetic differentiation with substantial gene flow among most populations. One population (Arosa), sampled from a site recently released from permafrost, demonstrated probable founder effect not correlated with geographical isolation. The topology of the Population Graph identified three subgroups with several key populations (BGU, CHL, GSB, SBE, and VRO) that maintained genetic connectivity of populations from distant locations.

Notes

Funding provided by: Swiss National Science Foundation*
Crossref Funder Registry ID:
Award Number: 31003A_156456

Funding provided by: Swiss National Science Foundation
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001711
Award Number: 31003A_156456

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