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Wiley InterScience

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Conserving the evolutionary potential of California valley oak (Quercus lobata Née): a multivariate genetic approach to conservation planning
DELPHINE GRIVET*†, VICTORIA L. SORK*, ROBERT D. WESTFALL and FRANK W. DAVIS§
  *Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Institute of the Environment, University of California Los Angeles, Box 951606, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1606, USA,   Department of Forest Systems and Resources, Forest Research Institute, CIFOR-INIA, Carretera de la Coruña km 7.5, 28040 Madrid, Spain,   Sierra Nevada Research Center, USDA Forest, Service, Pacific Southwest Research Station, PO Box 245, Berkeley, CA 94701, USA,   §Donald Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA
Correspondence: Victoria L. Sork, Fax: 310-206-0484; E-mail: vlsork@ucla.edu
Copyright Journal compilation © 2008 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
KEYWORDS
allelic richness • canonical trend surface analysis • colonization • gene flow • Geographic Information System

ABSTRACT

California valley oak (Quercus lobata Née) is a seriously threatened endemic oak species in California and a keystone species for foothill oak ecosystems. Urban and agricultural development affects a significant fraction of the species' range and predicted climate change is likely to dislocate many current populations. Here, we explore spatial patterns of multivariate genotypes and genetic diversity throughout the range of valley oak to determine whether ongoing and future patterns of habitat loss could threaten the evolutionary potential of the species by eradicating populations of distinctive genetic composition. This manuscript will address three specific questions: (i) What is the spatial genetic structure of the chloroplast and nuclear genetic markers? (ii) What are the geographical trends in the distribution of chloroplast and nuclear genotypes? (iii) Is there any part of the species' range where allelic diversity in either the chloroplast or nuclear genomes is particularly high? We analysed six chloroplast and seven nuclear microsatellite genetic markers of individuals widespread across the valley oak range. We then used a multivariate approach correlating genetic markers and geographical variables through a canonical trend surface analysis, followed by GIS mapping of the significant axes. We visualized population allelic richness spatially with GIS tools to identify regions of high diversity. Our findings, based on the distribution of multivariate genotypes and allelic richness, identify areas with distinctive histories and genetic composition that should be given priority in reserve network design, especially because these areas also overlap with landscape change and little degree of protection. Thus, without a careful preservation plan, valuable evolutionary information will be lost for valley oak.


Received 8 March 2007; revision accepted 10 July 2007

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1365-294X.2007.03498.x About DOI

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This supplement to Molecular Ecology Resources is devoted to showcasing current barcoding work and providing a forum for the discussion of issues dealing with barcoding. The supplement grew out of the second Canadian Barcode of Life Network Scientific Symposium devoted to DNA barcoding, held at the Royal Ontario Museum (Toronto, Canada, 28–29 April 2008).

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