Abstract

In the present study we investigated the genetic structure and genetic diversity of Pinus heldreichii populations in Bulgaria using chloroplast microsatellite markers and terpene analysis. We were interested in addressing the following questions: (1) can population structuring in Bosnian pine be detected via chloroplast microsatellite markers; (2) are there differences in population differentiation as determined by terpenes and microsatellites; and (3) how are the patterns of size variant frequencies and geographical distances related. Four provenances were chosen throughout the species' range in Bulgaria. Following DNA extraction, chloroplast microsatellite (cpSSR) loci were surveyed using 6 primer pairs. Between 2 and 5 size variants were identified at each locus. A total of 16 size variants at the 6 loci were identified, 4 occurring at low frequencies. They were combined in 21 different haplotypes including 11 that were unique. AMOVA analysis revealed that 18.25% of the variation was found among populations, while 81.75% was expressed within populations. The cpSSR analysis divided Bosnian pine populations into two groups, the first represented by populations B, C and D located in the south and north-western part of the Pirin and Slavianka mountains, while the second group, represented by population A, is located in the north-eastern Pirin mountain. Terpene analysis revealed that on average, 59% of the monoterpene pool in P. heldreichii is accounted for by limonene (range 36–48%) followed by α-pinene (range 16–17%). The presence of two distinct groups (Pop-A, Pop-D and Pop-B, Pop-C) is more consistent with physical distances between populations. No significant correlation between genetic distance determined by chloroplast microsatellites analysis and chemotype distance determined by terpenes was observed. Our results suggest that the structural pattern of genetic diversity of cpDNA in Bosnian pine populations is the consequence of historical and biogeographical processes.

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