Abstract

China's subtropical forests have experienced severe deforestation and most native forests have been fragmented into an archipelago-like landscape. The genetic effect of habitat fragmentation depends largely on the level of gene flow within and among population fragments. In the present study, Eurycorymbus cavaleriei, a canopy tree found throughout subtropical China, was selected as a representative insect-pollinated plant species to assess genetic consequence of forest fragmentation. Contemporary pollen dispersal and mating patterns were estimated in two physically isolated stands of E. cavaleriei within fragmented forests using six highly polymorphic microsatellite loci. We found high genetic diversity ( H E = 0.670–0.754) in both adults and offspring in the fragmented agricultural landscape, suggesting that habitat fragmentation did not necessarily erode genetic diversity of E. cavaleriei. Although substantial pollen travelled less than 100 m, paternity analysis revealed that a large amount of long-distance pollination events occurred, with the average pollen dispersal distance being 1107 m and 325 m for the two stands, respectively. Extensive pollen immigration (39.3–42.6%) indicated that there was effective genetic connectivity among E. cavaleriei stands in the fragmented forests. twogener analysis revealed that the exponential power model was the best-fitting dispersal curve with a fat-tailed ( b < 1) dispersal feature. The results from a multilocus mating system analysis suggested that a small amount of biparental inbreeding and some correlated mating events occurred in the fragmented forests, which were similar to our parallel findings in the continuous forests of E. cavaleriei. Estimates of pollen pool structure ( Φ FT = 0.128–0.174) indicated large genetic differences between pollen clouds accepted by maternal trees. The number of effective pollen donors ( N ep) in E. cavaleriei, estimated using both mltr ( N ep = 4.2–5.3) and twogener ( N ep = 2.9–3.9) models, was equivalent to the number of effective pollen donors detected in continuous forests of E. cavaleriei. The pollen dispersal and mating patterns detected here indicated that habitat fragmentation did not have a negative impact on pollen movement in E. cavaleriei, possibly due to its generalist pollination system and the resilient foraging behavior of its pollinators in response to changes in landscape structure. The long distances of pollen-mediated gene flow between patches highlight the conservation value of remnant forest fragments in maintaining genetic connectivity at the landscape scale in subtropical China.

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