Cultivation shapes genetic novelty in a globally important invader.
Date
2012Author
Thompson, Genevieve
Bellstedt, Dirk
Byrne, Margaret
Millar, Mellisa
Richardson, Dave
Wilson, John
Le Roux, Johannes
Format Extent
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Show full item recordAbstract
Acacia saligna is a species complex that has become invasive in a number of countries
worldwide where it has caused substantial environmental and economic impacts.
Understanding genetic and other factors contributing to its success may allow managers to limit future invasions of closely related species. We used three molecular markers to compare the introduced range (South Africa) to the native range (Western Australia). Nuclear markers showed that invasive populations are divergent from native populations and most closely related to a cultivated population in Western Australia. We also found incongruence between nuclear and chloroplast data that, together with the long history of cultivation of the species, suggest that introgressive hybridization (coupled
with chloroplast capture) may have occurred within A. saligna. While we could not
definitively prove introgression, the genetic distance between cultivated and native A. saligna populations was comparable to known interspecific divergences among other Acacia species. Therefore, cultivation, multiple large-scale introductions and possibly
introgressive hybridization have rapidly given rise to the divergent genetic entity present in South Africa. This may explain the known global variation in invasiveness and inaccuracy of native bioclimatic models in predicting potential distributions.
Collections
- RESEARCH: Le Roux, JJ [73]
- RESEARCH: Richardson D [360]
- RESEARCH: Wilson, JRU [157]