Publication | Closed Access
Genetic Consequences of Tropical Second-Growth Forest Regeneration
106
Citations
5
References
2005
Year
EngineeringSecondary ForestsForest RestorationGeneticsForestryFounder PopulationGenetic DiversityConservation GeneticsMolecular EcologyBiogeographyTree BreedingBiodiversityGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsDeforestationGenetic ConsequencesEvolutionary BiologyGenetic AdmixtureMedicine
Secondary forests are more extensive than old-growth forests in many tropical regions, yet the genetic composition of colonizing populations is poorly understood. We analyzed the parentage of a founder population of 130 individuals of the canopy palm Iriartea deltoidea in a 24-year-old second-growth forest in lowland Costa Rica. Among 66 trees in adjacent old-growth forest, only two individuals contributed 56% of the genes in founders. Second-growth trees had lower genetic diversity and larger patches of similar genotypes than old-growth trees. Recovery of genetic diversity of populations in tropical second-growth forests may take many generations and will require continued dispersal from genetically diverse source populations.
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