J For Res (2011) 16:292–301 DOI 10.1007/s10310-010-0227-4
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Process to extinction and genetic structure of a threatened Japanese conifer species, Picea koyamae Toshio Katsuki • Ken’ichi Shimada Hiroshi Yoshimaru
•
Received: 18 October 2009 / Accepted: 7 August 2010 / Published online: 23 September 2010 Ó The Japanese Forest Society and Springer 2010
Abstract Since the end of the glacial age, Picea koyamae has been sparsely distributed in Japan as a relict species and is presently threatened with extinction. We investigated the population structure and genetic structure of nine populations of P. koyamae. Population size was assessed at 9–135 individuals in habitats ranging from 0.5 to 11.5 ha, and seedlings and saplings were observed in all but one particular population, which had a Sasa-type (bamboo grass) forest floor. The effective number of alleles per locus (Ne) within peripheral populations in the Yatsugatake Mountains was 1.8–2.7, much lower than that of core populations in the Akaishi Mountains (2.8–4.3) using five nuclear simple sequence repeat loci. This finding suggests that genetic variation in these populations has been reduced by isolation from other populations. The standardized genetic differentiation among populations (G0 ST) was 0.410 and higher than that found in other Japanese conifers, suggesting that isolation and inbreeding have progressed in this species. In two isolated populations at the Yatsugatake Mountains, the fixation index (FIS) was 0.315–0.354, much higher than the values determined for the other populations (-0.188 to 0.263). This suggests that these two populations have survived several generations while increasing the degree of inbreeding. However, the highest seedling density was in a population with low genetic variation and high FIS. The most serious problems at present appear to be the T. Katsuki (&) K. Shimada H. Yoshimaru Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, 1 Matsunosato, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8687, Japan e-mail:
[email protected] K. Shimada e-mail:
[email protected] H. Yoshimaru e-mail:
[email protected]
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declining number of mature trees and the deterioration of suitable environments for seedling establishment. Keywords Extinction Genetic structure Inbreeding nSSR Picea koyamae
Introduction Conifers are one of the most important timber resources in the world. However, 355 conifer taxa are of special concern, and 200 taxa are threatened with extinction (Farjon and Page 1999). For the conservation of these species, it is necessary to determine what processes may lead to their extinction. One extinction factor of particular concern is global warming, which may affect many species in the future. It is thus important to investigate the species that declined rapidly after the glacial age to consider the process of extinction by global warming. Picea is the most important constituent of the forests in the northern conifer biome and is widely distributed in Eurasia and North America (Farjon 1990). However, some species at the southern limit of distribution of the genus Picea, such as P. farreri, P. morrisonicola, P. chihuahuana and P. engelmanii ssp. mexicana, are listed as threatened species due to their small and relict distribution after the glacial age (Farjon and Page 1999). Picea koyamae Shiras. (yatsugatake-toˆhi in Japanese) is also one of these relict species at the southern fringe of Picea distribution. Picea koyamae is a tall conifer similar in morphology to the Norway spruce (P. abies (L.) Karst.) and classified into the section Picea subsection Picea series Picea (Schmidt 1989; Farjon 1990). A recent study using chloroplast DNA analysis reported that P. koyamae was allied to P. abies, P. asperata, P. aurantiaca, P. crassifolia,
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small populations suffer from three effects that further diminish their ability to evolve in response to environmental change: genetic variation is lost at a higher rate than that of larger populations; inbreeding is more rapid and thus reduction in fitness occurs; and there is a higher risk of accumulating deleterious mutations by chance effects (Frankham and Kingsolver 2004). Later consequences of fragmentation involve genetic effects associated with smaller population size and lower migration, which can lead to a higher rate of inbreeding (Colas et al. 2004). The deleterious effects of inbreeding can significantly impair population survival. Conifers are generally anemophilous and outcrossing species, but inbreeding depression has been reported in some species (Sorensen 1999). It is very likely that there is inbreeding depression in P. koyamae. Using allozymes, Katsuki et al. (2004) found that the genetic differentiation among four populations of P. koyamae (GST, 0.067) was higher than that of continuously distributed conifers in Japan (GST, 0.030–0.034; Tomaru et al. 1994; Uchida et al. 1997), but lower than that of discontinuously distributed conifers (GST, 0.144–0.170; Tani et al. 1996; Suyama et al. 1997). They showed that the genetic variation within three populations (Ne, effective number of alleles per locus, 1.23–1.25; He, average expected heterozygosity, 0.185–0.196) was in the range of
P. glehnii, P. koraiensis, P. obovata, P. meyeri and P. retroflexa (Sigurgeirsson and Szmidt 1993; Ran et al. 2006). Picea koyamae was first discovered in the Yatsugatake Mountains (Shirasawa and Koyama 1913), Honshu Island, Japan, and was believed to exist only there (Wilson 1916; Farjon 1990; Yamazaki 1995). Later, its presence was also confirmed in the Akaishi Mountains (Hayashi 1960; Shimizu 1992; Katsuki et al. 2004, 2008) (Fig. 1). However, it is listed as a vulnerable species in the Red Data Plant Report because of its sparse distribution (Farjon and Page 1999; Environmental Agency of Japan 2000), which covers only about 70 km (Katsuki et al. 2008). Picea koyamae is believed to have had a much wider distribution on Honshu Island during the last glacial age, but decreased during the postglacial age (Minaki 1987; Kobayashi et al. 2000). A few small and isolated populations of P. koyamae have been identified, and it is estimated that there are \1,000 living mature trees in the Yatsugatake and Akaishi Mountains combined (Katsuki et al. 2004, 2008). In view of the strong impact that genetic effective population size can have on the probability of population persistence (Newman and Pilson 1997), P. koyamae is threatened with extinction. Populations that cannot adapt to environmental change rapidly dwindle in size. Once this happens, the resultant
E138°17’ 15” 1800m
E138°21’ 00” N35°58’ 00”
1400m
N 36°00’
1500m
Nagano Pref.
Senmai-iwa
Mts.Yatsugatake
Nishi-dake
Tennyo-san
Fuki-sawa
Ohdaira Kaminigori-sawa
Todai-gawa Yabu-sawa
Mt. Nishi-dake
Karamatsu-sawa
1000m
Mt. Amigasa-dake
1km
500m
1200m
Mts Akaishi
1600m
2000m
N35°55’ 30”
Yamanashi Pref. Toyoguchi-yama 10km Tenshu-iwa
N 35°20’ E 138°00’
N40°
N Korea Japan E 138°45’
0
400km N30°
E130°
Fig. 1 Mesh area (black squares) in which Picea koyamae was confirmed (Katsuki et al. 2008), geographical position of this species’ natural range within Japan and names of localities and populations
E140°
(white circles) analyzed in this study. Nishi-dake area is shown in the map at the top right; confirmed positions of P. koyamae are shown as gray points on this map
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long-lived tree species (Ne, 1.32; He, 0.173; Hamrick and Godt 1990), but the genetic variation in the fourth population in the Yatsugatake Mountains (Ne, 1.16; He, 0.136) showed a rather low value. These findings suggest that this population may have experienced a bottleneck effect in the past (Katsuki et al. 2004). However, a high inbreeding coefficient was not found in that study due to a problem with the precision of analysis. In this study, therefore, we investigated the genetic variation and inbreeding in several populations of P. koyamae, using analysis of nuclear DNA markers (microsatellites), and the population structure of those populations using the density of seedlings, saplings, young trees and mature trees. From the results, we examined the process of fragmentation and isolation of those populations, paying particular attention to inbreeding depression.
Materials and methods Study site We investigated nine populations of Picea koyamae in six localities in two mountain ranges where material for DNA analysis could be collected (Table 1; Fig. 1). The Karamatsu-sawa and Fuki-sawa populations had long been known as type localities of P. koyamae (Wilson 1916), but the Tennyo-san and Senmai-iwa populations were confirmed only recently (Katsuki et al. 2008). The Fuki-sawa population is about 0.6 km from the Karamatsu-sawa population, and the Senmai-iwa population is about 1.8 km from the Fuki-sawa population (Fig. 1). These four populations in the Yatsugatake Mountains are isolated from each other and surrounded by Japanese larch (Larix kaempferi) plantation forest. These are peripheral populations considered to have been generated after a large-scale disturbance such as forest fire, harvest operation, typhoon or lava flow (Katsuki et al. 2008). It is currently estimated that only a few individual P. koyamae trees exist in the Yatsugatake Mountains area outside these four populations. Table 1 Mountains and localities of populations of Picea koyamae where samples were collected in this study
Mountains Yatsugatake
Akaishi
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Locality
In the Akaishi Mountains, the Ohdaira population is surrounded by a larch plantation forest followed by pasture, but the other populations occur in natural forests (Katsuki and Seido 1999). The Yabu-sawa and Kaminigori-sawa populations in Todai-gawa regenerated in a rockslide area about 100 years ago. Natural Japanese larch dominates in these stands and P. koyamae and P. maximowiczii, also a threatened spruce in Japan, grow under the larch canopy (Akashi 2006). Although Todai-gawa was believed to be the largest and core locality for the remaining P. koyamae and P. maximowiczii, analysis measurements were made only around the two populations, because other parts of the valley were too steep to access. The Toyoguchi-yama population may be one of the largest populations of P. koyamae, and the Tenshu-iwa population is on the southern limit of the species’ distribution (Katsuki et al. 2005). Picea koyamae reportedly grows on limestone terraces with natural Japanese arborvitae (Thuja standishii), Japanese larch or northern Japanese hemlock (Tsuga diversifolia) (Katsuki et al. 2008). Picea koyamae occurs in areas around these populations. The populations in the Akaishi Mountains are continuous, but those in the Yatsugatake Mountains are not continuous. Population structure Population size is an extremely important factor for population structure and regeneration. Therefore, the number of mature trees and areal size of Picea koyamae for each population were surveyed. Mature tree size was considered to be larger than 20 cm DBH (diameter at breast height), because the minimum size observed for flowering individuals was about 20 cm DBH. Mature trees were confirmed by direct observation, and the position of each tree was measured by GPS. It was settled that the edge of a population is where no other individuals are seen within a range of about 50 m. From this survey, the number of confirmed individuals was considered to be the population number. The areal size of each population was calculated from the position of each individual measured by GPS.
Population
Altitude (m)
Geological type
Tennyo-san
Tennyo-san
1,750
Lava flow
Nishi-dake
Karamatsu-sawa
1,700
Lava flow
Fuki-sawa
1,850
Lava flow Lava flow
Senmai-iwa
1,700
Ohdaira
Ohdaira
1,600
Phyllite
Todai-gawa
Yabu-sawa
1,400
Sandstone
Kaminigori-sawa
1,200
Lime stone
Toyoguchi-yama
Toyoguchi-yama
1,800
Lime stone
Tenshu-iwa
Tenshu-iwa
1,750
Lime stone
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Tree succession is also an important factor for regeneration. The density of P. koyamae was surveyed in a quadrate (20 9 20 m) for each population. Each quadrate was set at a place where the density of mature trees was highest within the P. koyamae population. Young trees were considered to be \20 cm in DBH, but [1.3 m in height. Saplings were considered to be \1.3 m in height, but at least 10 years old. Seedlings were considered to be younger than 10 years old, because seedlings in inferior environments may die within several years after germination. The age of seedlings was assessed by measuring the number of branches. Based on these results, the relationship between number or density of mature trees and seedling density was examined using the Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient. Genetic structure For DNA analysis, we collected young branches from about 30 mature individuals from each population. Due to the small number of individuals in each population, the sample size was decided as 30 individuals in each population. However, samples were collected from young trees when there were few mature individuals. Collected samples were stored at -30°C until the DNA was extracted. DNA was extracted from 200 mg of fresh needles using a DNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen, Tokyo, Japan). Primers for 18 microsatellite markers selected from Pfeiffer et al. (1997), Rajora et al. (2001) and Hodgetts et al. (2001) were examined using samples of P. koyamae. Markers that had clear amplification fragments of DNA were selected and used for DNA analysis for P. koyamae. PCR was performed with 10-lL volumes containing 20 ng genomic DNA, 0.1 mM of each dNTP, 19 PCR buffer (200 mM Tris–HCl, 500 mM KCl), 2.0 mM MgCl2, 0.27 U Taq DNA polymerase, and 0.2 lM of each primer. The PCR thermal profile was as follows: an initial denaturing step for 5 min at 94°C followed by 35 cycles of 45 s each at 94°C (denaturation), 45 s at the annealing temperature, and 45 s at 72°C (extension) before final elongation at 72°C for 10 min in a GeneAmpÒ 9600 PCR System (Applied Biosystems, Perkin Elmer, Foster City, CA, USA). The forward sequence of each primer pair was labeled with a fluorescent dye. The genotypes were determined using an ABI 310 Genetic Analyzer and Genotyper software Ver. 2.0 (Applied Biosystems). Genetic variation within the populations was estimated according to a number of parameters, including: average number of alleles per locus (Na), effective number of alleles per locus (Ne; Kimura and Crow 1964), allelic richness (Rs), number of rare (\5%) alleles per locus (Nr), number of private alleles per locus (Np), average observed
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heterozygosity (Ho), and average expected unbiased heterozygosity under Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium (He). Fixation index within each population (FIS; Wright 1951), which represent the deviation in genotypic proportions from the Hardy–Weinberg expectation, were calculated for polymorphic loci in each population. The bottleneck effect is also an important factor for genetic variation within a population. The probabilities for the Wilcoxon signed-rank test for recent bottlenecks under the infinite alleles model (IAM), stepwise-mutation model (SMM) and two-phase model of mutation (TPM) were calculated using polymorphic loci in each population (Piry et al. 1999). Genetic differentiation among populations was calculated according to the following genetic diversity statistics: relative extent of genetic differentiation among populations (GST; Nei and Chesser 1983), standardized genetic differentiation among populations (G0 ST; Hedrick 2005), true differentiation (D; Jost 2008), genetic differentiation index among populations (RST; Slatkin 1995), and fixation index among populations (FST). The unbiased estimates of genetic distance (DA) among all populations were determined (Nei and Chesser 1983), and dendrograms generated from neighbor-joining were analyzed using bootstrap probability based on 1,000 replicates. The correlation between genetic distance (DA) and geographical distance was examined using Mantel tests (Mantel 1967). The above calculations were computed by FSTAT 2.9.3.2 (Goudet 2001) and BOTTLENECK (Piry et al. 1999) software programs. In addition, the population substructure of P. koyamae was assessed by the Bayesian method program, STRUCTURE Ver. 2.2 (Falush et al. 2007). STRUCTURE was run 20 times independently for each K (ranging from 1 to 20) for 10,000 Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) iterations after a burn-in period of 10,000 times on the total dataset without any prior information on the original population of each sampled individual. We determined the optimal number of clusters (K) from an ad hoc statistic DK based on the rate of change in the log probability of data between successive K values (Evanno et al. 2005).
Results Population structure The number of mature trees in the populations (except at Toyoguchi-yama and Tenshu-iwa, which could not be confirmed due to the steep slopes at these two population sites) ranged from 9 to 135 individuals, and the areal size of populations was 0.5–11.5 ha (Table 2). Mature tree density was about 10 individuals/ha. These findings
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Table 2 Stand type, population size of Picea koyamae and density of each age stage in nine populations Population
Coverage of canopy (%)
Type of forest floor
Population size of P. koyamaea
Density of P. koyamae (ha-1)b
Mature tree number
Mature tree density (ha-1)
Seedling
Sapling
Young tree
Areal size (ha)
Yatsugatake Mountains area Tennyo-san
45
Sasa
62
4.4
14
-
-
?
Karamatsu-sawa Fuki-sawa
95 95
Moss Moss
135 15
11.5 2.1
12 7
8,200 ?
? 1,075
? 2,550
Senmai-iwa
90
Moss
42
4.4
10
550
-
175
Akaishi Mountains area
a
Ohdaira
90
Moss
20
12.0
2
?
?
?
Yabu-sawa
95
Moss
17
2.5
7
50
?
75
Kaminigori-sawa
85
Moss
9
0.5
18
-
-
175
Toyoguchi-yama
75
Moss
50–80
8.3
6–11
325
?
?
Tenshu-iwa
60
Moss
30–50
1.5
20–33
325
450
150
Population size was estimated from direct observation; mature trees, DBH is over 20 cm
b
Density was estimated from a plot count (400 m2); seedling, age under about 10 years old; sapling, height under 1.3 m; young trees, DBH under 20 cm; ?, absent inside observed quadrate, but present in the population; -, absent inside and outside observed quadrate
indicate that Picea koyamae forms small populations of a few dozen individuals within a few hectares. In a survey of regeneration, seedlings or saplings were observed in all populations except Tennyo-san and Kaminigori-sawa. The density of seedlings was not significantly correlated to the density of mature trees, but was significantly correlated to the number of mature trees (r = 0.85; P = 0.003). The forest floor of all stands except for the Tennyo-san population was a moss-type, while the forest floor of the Tennyo-san population was a Sasa-type. The low density of mature trees and high density of young trees in Fuki-sawa, Yabu-sawa, Kaminigori-sawa and Tenshu-iwa populations was a different characteristic compared to the other populations, because the forest age was young. Only in the Fuki-sawa and Tenshu-iwa populations was the density of saplings higher than that of seedlings. Genetic structure Six of the 18 tested markers of nuclear simple sequence repeat (nSSR) (SpAGC1, SpAGD1, SpAGG3, UAPgAC/ AT6, UAPgAG150 and UAPgCA91) showed good amplification of DNA in P. koyamae (Table 3). A total of 281 individuals in nine populations were genotyped at these six markers, and more than 98% of the loci in all individuals were genotyped. UAPgAC/AT6 was monomorphic in all nine populations; the other five markers were polymorphic in at least one population. Indices of genetic variation in each population are shown in Table 4. The number of alleles per locus, Na, within the four populations in the Yatsugatake Mountains was 4.2–4.6, somewhat lower than the number (5.6–9.0)
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Table 3 Microsatellite DNA loci used and the number and size of alleles detected at each microsatellite DNA locus Locus namea
Repeat unit
SpAGC1
(TC)5TT(TC)10
7
66–96
SpAGD1
(AG)25
33
125–211
SpAGG3 UAPgAC/AT6
(GA)24 (AC)10(AT)7
17 1
101–148 117
UAPgAG150
(AG)19
3
132–140
UAPgCA91
(CA)20
10
114–142
Total number of alleles
Allele size range (bp)
a SpAGC1, SpAGD1 and SpAGG3 are from Pfeiffer et al. (1997); UAPgAC/AT6, UAPgAG150 and UAPgCA91 are from Hodgetts et al. (2001)
within the five populations in the Akaishi Mountains. Except for heterozygosity, the other indices within the four populations in the Yatsugatake Mountains (Ne, 1.8–2.7; RS, 4.1–4.4; Nr, 1.4–2.8; Np, 0.0–0.4) were also lower than those in the Akaishi Mountains (Ne, 2.7–4.3; RS, 5.5–8.7; Nr, 2.8–5.0; Np, 0.2–1.0). Among the Akaishi populations, the allelic indices of Tenshu-iwa (Na, 5.6; Ne, 2.7; RS, 5.5; Nr, 2.8) were the lowest. Ho (0.269–0.585) and He (0.341–0.502) of the Yatsugatake populations did not show a clear difference with the respective values of the Akaishi populations (Ho, 0.439–0.588; He, 0.524–0.596). But Ho and He of the populations in Tennyo-san (Ho, 0.275; He, 0.393) and Karamatsu-sawa (Ho, 0.269; He, 0.341) were clearly lower than those of the other populations (Ho, 0.431–0.585; He, 0.484–0.502). Ne of the populations in Tennyo-san (1.8) and Karamatsu-sawa (1.8) were also relatively low.
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Table 4 Number of alleles, heterozygosity, fixation indices and probability of recent bottleneck effects within nine populations of Picea koyamae Population
Sample number
Na
Ne
RS
Nr
Np
Ho
He
FIS
IAM
TPM
SMM
Yatsugatake Mountains area Tennyo-san
32
4.6
1.8
4.4
2.8
0.0
0.275
0.393
0.354*
0.563
0.906
0.938
Karamatsu-sawa
32
4.4
1.8
4.2
2.6
0.4
0.269
0.341
0.315*
1.000
1.000
1.000
Fuki-sawa
31
4.2
2.7
4.1
1.4
0.0
0.585
0.484
-0.188*
0.063
0.438
0.563
Senmai-iwa
32
4.4
2.4
4.3
1.4
0.2
0.431
0.502
0.117*
0.063
0.438
0.906
Akaishi Mountains area Ohdaira Yabusawa
32 32
9.0 6.4
4.3 2.8
8.7 6.2
5.0 3.4
1.0 0.4
0.588 0.550
0.596 0.551
0.038 0.048
0.438 0.563
0.844 0.906
0.969 0.969
Kaminigori-sawa
28
7.8
4.1
7.8
2.8
0.2
0.443
0.573
0.263*
0.438
0.906
0.969
Toyoguchi-yama
31
6.6
3.7
6.4
3.0
0.8
0.439
0.524
0.181*
0.031
0.156
0.969
Tenshu-iwa
31
5.6
2.7
5.5
2.8
0.8
0.560
0.561
0.156
0.438
0.906
-0.002
Na number of alleles per locus, Ne effective number of alleles per locus, RS allelic richness (based on 28 samples), Nr number of rare alleles (\5%) per locus, Np number of private alleles per locus, Ho average observed heterozygosity, He average expected heterozygosity, FIS fixation indices, IAM provability for Wilcoxon signed-rank test for recent bottlenecks under the infinite allele model, SMM provability for Wilcoxon signed-rank test for recent bottlenecks under the stepwise mutation model, TPM provability for Wilcoxon signed-rank test for recent bottlenecks under the two-phase model of mutation * Significance level (P \ 0.05) and refers to a deviation from zero
Fixation indices (FIS) within the nine populations were estimated using four polymorphic loci, but not UAPgAG150, which was monomorphic in seven populations. FIS values of five populations were significantly (P [ 0.05) positive, especially for Tennyo-san (0.354) and Karamatsusawa (0.315) in the Yatsugatake Mountains and the populations in Kaminigori-sawa (0.263) and Toyoguchi-yama (0.181) in the Akaishi Mountains. This indicates that inbreeding or self-fertilization have occurred in those populations. Bottleneck analysis under the IAM, the SMM and the TPM indicated significant heterozygosity excess for only the Toyoguchi-yama population in the Akaishi Mountains under IAM (Table 4). For the other populations, the Wilcoxon signed-rank test under the three models indicated no greater heterozygosity than that expected for populations at mutation-drift equilibrium. Levels of genetic differentiation among the nine populations of P. koyamae were calculated from five polymorphic loci. The relative extent of genetic differentiation among populations (GST) was 0.188, standardized genetic differentiation among populations (G0 ST) was 0.410, true differentiation (D) was 0.274, genetic differentiation index among populations (RST) was 0.173, and fixation index among populations (FST) was 0.209. Genetic distance among the populations was between 0.058 (Ohdaira vs Kaminigori-sawa) and 0.510 (Tennyosan vs Senmai-iwa) (Table 5). The relationship between geographical distance and genetic distance among populations derived using the Mantel test did not show a large positive correlation (r = 0.234; P = 0.172).
Tennyo-san Fuki-sawa Toyoguchi-yama 908
Tenshu-iwa 880
Ohdaira Kaminigori-sawa
564
Senmai-iwa
Yabu-sawa 0.1
Karamatsu-sawa
Fig. 2 Dendrogram for nine populations of Picea koyamae from neighbor-joining analysis based on pairwise DA distance. The figures in the phylogenetic tree represent bootstrap probability based on 1,000 replicates, and only the values [500 are shown
The dendrogram from the neighbor-joining analysis based on pairwise DA distances is shown in Fig. 2. The bootstrap probabilities suggest combining the Tennyo-san and Fuki-sawa populations, and the Ohdaira and Kaminigori-sawa populations. We determined K = 2 as the optimal number of clusters for use with STRUCTURE. The value of DK at K = 2 was the highest, and the one at K = 8 and 9 were also high. As the result, it was shown that all individuals were firstly sorted by three populations at the Yatsugatake Mountains and six other populations including another population at the Yatsugatake Mountains (Fig. 3). Furthermore, those two groups were calculated within each populations, and we determined K = 3 for three populations at Yatsugatake, and K = 6 for the other six populations. Three populations
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Table 5 DA distance (Nei and Chesser 1983) for all pairs from each of the nine populations of Picea koyamae Population
TN
KR
FK
SM
OD
YB
KM
TY
Tennyo-san (TN)
–
Karamatsu-sawa (KR)
0.502
–
Fuki-sawa (FK)
0.296
0.474
–
Senmai-iwa (SM)
0.510
0.333
0.295
–
Ohdaira (OD)
0.337
0.346
0.258
0.177
Yabusawa (YB)
0.413
0.303
0.396
0.270
0.146
–
Kaminigori-sawa (KM)
0.381
0.373
0.303
0.218
0.058
0.142
–
Toyoguchi-yama (TY)
0.362
0.470
0.410
0.266
0.219
0.274
0.238
–
Tenshu-iwa (TS)
0.383
0.469
0.411
0.286
0.222
0.312
0.227
0.301
–
(Tennyo-san, Karamatsu-sawa, Fuki-sawa) in the Yatsugatake Mountains consist of completely different clusters from the other populations. The Senmani-iwa population in the Yatsugatake Mountains might have some relationship with those in the Akaishi Mountains and contain two kinds of clusters. The Tenshu-iwa population and part of the Toyoguchi-yama population had nearly different clusters from the others in the Akaishi Mountains. Individuals from Ohdaira to part of Toyoguchi-yama consisted of multiple clusters.
Discussion The processes of fragmentation and isolation The number (9–135) and areal size (0.5–12.0 ha) of the populations of Picea koyamae confirmed in this study (Table 2) are considered to be much smaller compared to other spruces occurring in boreal forests. Based on observations of large contiguous stands of P. glauca, O’Connell et al. (2006) estimated that a threshold population size of 180 trees is needed to reduce the negative effects of pollen limitation and inbreeding and maintain seed yields. Picea jezoensis var. hondoensis occurring in the same region as P. koyamae (Central Honshu, Japan), also often forms large populations of over 1,000 individuals. However, the small population size appears to be unexceptional for P. koyamae, because there were small populations in natural habitats. The population size of P. koyamae likely depends on the scale of disturbances that occurred in the past such as forest fire, rockslide, slope failure, typhoon, forest harvest, etc. Such disturbances in relatively flat regions may occur on a scale as large as over a dozen hectares. However, it is believed that disturbances in the present habitat of P. koyamae occurred on a small scale (under a dozen hectares) due to the region being mountainous.
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The nSSR-derived value (FST, 0.209; RST, 0.173; G0 ST, 0.410; D, 0.274) of genetic differentiation among populations in P. koyamae was high compared with nSSR-derived values of other Japanese conifers, such as Cryptomeria japonica (FST, 0.028; RST, 0.032; G0 ST, 0.125; Takahashi et al. 2005), Chamaecyparis obtusa (FST, 0.039; GST, 0.040; G0 ST, 0.188; Matsumoto et al. 2010), Picea alcoquiana (FST, 0.071; G0 ST, 0.164; Aizawa et al. 2008) and Picea jezoensis (FST, 0.101; Aizawa et al. 2009). Here, the G0 ST values could be calculated from the results of the above reference papers, but D could not be calculated because of the lack of HT value in their papers. The comparison of G0 ST values indicates that differentiation among populations of P. koyamae is substantial even though its geographic distribution area is small. It was suggested that the genetic variation of P. koyamae is maintained by small but differentiated populations. The analyses of genetic distance (Table 5; Fig. 2) and STRUCTURE (Fig. 3) indicated that genetic differentiation among the three populations in the core area (Ohdaira, Yabu-sawa, Kaminigori-sawa) was smaller than that of the six populations in the peripheral area. In addition, it was found that the genetic variation within populations was higher in the core area than in the peripheral area (Table 4). Picea koyamae is a wind pollination species, and a sufficient quantity of pollen must be scattered for pollination. These results suggest that if there is sufficient gene flow by pollen at the high-density core area, genetic variation within a small population is maintained, which is probably the case for Kaminigori-sawa. On the other hand, there was little gene flow at the lowdensity peripheral area, where the population hardly exchanges genes with other populations. It was suggested that the genetic distance between Karamatsu-sawa and Fuki-sawa was relatively long compared to that between the other populations, even though they are only 0.6 km from each other, in view of the small gene flow. It appears that there was little gene flow among the Yatsugatake populations. These results suggest that fragmentation and isolation progress in the peripheral populations of P. koyamae. The FIS value (0.101) of P. koyamae indicated that this species was basically an outcrossing species like other Picea spp., but there was also an influence of inbreeding. Low FIS values have been reported for other Picea spp., such as P. alcoquiana (0.018; Aizawa et al. 2008), P. asperata (0.005; Luo et al. 2005), P. breweriana (0.003; Ledig et al. 2005), P. mariana (-0.025; Gamache et al. 2003; 0.02; Perry and Bousquet 2001) and P. rubens (0.021; Rajora et al. 2000). In addition, significantly positive FIS values have been reported for P. chihuahuana (0.185; Ledig et al. 1997), P. glauca (0.226; Rajora et al. 2005) and P. sitchensis in peripheral areas (0.17; Gapare et al. 2005). A clear relationship is not shown between the
J For Res (2011) 16:292–301
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Fig. 3 Summary plot of estimates of Q for Picea koyamae. Each individual is represented by a single vertical line broken into K segments, with lengths proportional to each of the K inferred clusters. a Calculated for all populations; b calculated for three populations; c calculated for six populations
(a)
K=2
1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0
1.0
(b) K = 3
(c) K = 6
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 Tennyo-san
Fuki-sawa
Karamatsu-sawa
FIS value and the distribution characteristic of the species. For example, the FIS value of P. breweriana, an endangered species, was low. On the other hand, the FIS value of P. glauca was significantly positive. Inbreeding may occur in small and large populations. Both high and low FIS values in populations in the Akaishi Mountains (Table 4) indicate that any population of P. koyamae that was derived from a small number of related individuals in core or peripheral areas might increase the degree of inbreeding. It was found that small population size and isolation led to the low values of genetic variation and high values of FIS in the Tennyo-san and Karamatsu-sawa populations. Although the analysis of BOTTLENECK indicated that these populations have not experienced a recent reduction in effective population size, it does not deny that they experienced bottlenecks in the far past. Some populations of Picea have shown high fixation indices (Ledig et al. 1997; Gapare et al. 2005; Rajora et al. 2005) and the existence of selfing (Innes and Ringius 1990; Ledig et al. 2000; Flores-Lope´z et al. 2005). These results suggest that over several generations, small and isolated populations of P. koyamae have survived with little gene flow, and have sustained themselves while increasing the degree of inbreeding. Disincentives for regeneration The present populations of P. koyamae are likely to have become isolated and small through exploitation and the
Ohdaira Senmai-iwa
Kaminigori-sawa
Yabusawa
Tenshu-iwa
Toyoguchi-yama
plantation of larch during the past few decades. The high density of seedlings at Karamatsu-sawa (Table 2) indicates that the number and density of mature trees are more important than inbreeding depression for regeneration. Some possible reasons for the absence of seedlings at Tennyo-san are the effect of Sasa bamboo grass covering the forest floor and damage by seed chalcids (T. Katsuki et al., unpublished data), while at Kaminigori-sawa it might be due to the density of mature trees. However, it is also important to note that the decline of genetic variation may cause degeneration through inbreeding. Mosseler et al. (2003) found a strong relationship between height growth and measure of genetic diversity based on allozyme analyses of P. rubens. O’Connell et al. (2006) indicated that the proportion of empty seeds was high in small populations of P. glauca. A population with low genetic variation and high inbreeding degree is considered to be facing a crisis situation. Conserving genetic diversity in peripheral populations may require larger reserves for in situ conservation than what is required in core populations (Gapare and Aitken 2005). It appears that some special measures must be taken, such as promoting natural regeneration, or planting saplings. Acknowledgments We gratefully acknowledge Prof. C. Campbell (University of Maine) for valuable input; K. Kitamura, Y. Tsumura, K. Yoshimura (Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute) and T. Sugaya (Tokyo University of Agriculture) for their help in collecting and examining samples; H. Nishikawa, T. Nagaike (Yamanashi Forest Research Institute), S. Tanaka (The Botanical Society of Yamanashi), K. Akashi (Iida City Museum), and K. Bessho and
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300 M. Ohnaka (Tama Forest Science Garden, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute) for their help in collecting and field surveying; and the Chubu Regional Forest Office, Yamanashi Prefecture and Ohshika Village for their permission to conduct the study. This study was supported by funds from the Japanese Ministry of the Environment.
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