Abstract

Due to substantial population decline, the Korean orchid P. scolopendrifolia is considered endangered and highly threatened. Like many endangered species, it is vulnerable to biological and anthropogenic threats that can lead to the loss of genetic diversity and, ultimately, extinction. Therefore, the assessment of genetic diversity and population genetic structure is imperative for conservation. In this study, we newly developed 15 polymorphic microsatellite markers. Analyses of genetic diversity and population genetic structure that included 182 samples from 11 populations were conducted using microsatellite markers and four noncoding regions of chloroplast DNA. Our study revealed a relatively low level of genetic diversity (Ho = 0.529, He = 0.356), albeit harboring with private alleles based on microsatellite genotyping data, and high haplotype diversities based on chloroplast DNA sequences data. The results of STRUCTURE and PCoA based on microsatellite genotyping data showed population differentiations. An AMOVA based on chloroplast DNA sequence data further corroborated these conclusions, indicating about 70% of variations found among populations. Low genetic diversity and divergence among the population might have been caused by factors, such as asexual reproduction, demographic events (bottleneck and population expansion), geographic isolation, and low gene flow. The development and implication of conservation strategies and management of P. scolopendrifolia are proposed based on these results.

Highlights

  • Species with small population size or small geographic ranges subsequently tend to have reduced gene flow and increased genetic divergence, due to genetic drift and inbreeding [1]

  • Among the 54 paired primers designed and synthesized, 15 polymorphic and 3 monomorphic microsatellite markers were newly developed for P. scolopendrifolia (Table 2)

  • Eighteen newly developed microsatellite markers were deposited at GenBank (MN592878-MN592895) and 15 polymorphic markers were used in this study

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Summary

Introduction

Species with small population size or small geographic ranges subsequently tend to have reduced gene flow and increased genetic divergence, due to genetic drift and inbreeding [1]. Because vulnerabilities to biological and anthropogenic threats are directly linked to loss of genetic

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