Abstract

Cedrus libani of Lebanon is a valuable natural resource and the dominant species in its natural ecosystem. Intense and diverse anthropogenic pressures over historical times raised concerns about its genetic vigor and continued survival. Our investigation of the genetic diversity included samples from all remnant natural populations. Assessment of the genetic diversity using random amplified polymorphic DNA markers revealed the persistence of considerable variation distributed within populations with low population differentiation corroborated by Bayesian and analysis of molecular variance estimates (GST = 0.07, ΦST = 0.09). Individual assignment tests were carried out to investigate measures of gene flow. Inferences concluded that this natural heritage is not currently threatened by inbreeding or by random genetic drift. Correlation studies investigated possible effects of spatial distribution and environmental conditions on genetic structure. A climatic trend corresponding to a temperature–humidity gradient correlated significantly with the level of genetic diversity, while the edaphic variation did not.

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