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- Title
Identifying Populations for Conservation on the Basis of Genetic Markers.
- Authors
Petit, Rémy J.; El Mousadik, Abdelhamid; Pons, Odile
- Abstract
To select candidate populations of wild species to be given priority for conservation, genetic criteria gained from the study of molecular markers may be useful. Traditionally, diversity measures such as expected heterozygosity or percentage of polymorphic loci have been considered. For conservation we propose instead that priority should be given to measures of allelic richness. To standardize the results of allelic richness across populations, we used the technique of rarefaction. This technique allows evaluation of the expected number of different alleles among equal-sized samples drawn from several different populations. We also show how the contribution of each population to total diversity can be partitioned into two components. The first is related to the level of diversity of the population and the second to its divergence from the other populations. For conservation purposes the uniqueness of a population—in terms of its allelic composition—may be at least as important as its diversity level. These new descriptors are illustrated by means of isozyme and chloroplast DNA data obtained for an endangered tree species, the argan tree of Morocco (Argania spinosa (L.) Skeels). With these analyses the conservation value of the argan tree populations, especially those of two isolates present in the north of the country, can be better appreciated. The methods proposed to identify priority areas for conservation of the genetic resources of the argan tree are compared to those sometimes advocated in the case of reserve design, where one of the goals is to maximize species richness.
- Subjects
WILDLIFE conservation; GENETIC markers; POPULATION genetics; BIODIVERSITY
- Publication
Conservation Biology, 1998, Vol 12, Issue 4, p844
- ISSN
0888-8892
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1046/j.1523-1739.1998.96489.x