Abstract
Genetic diversity and differentiation were studied in Excoecaria agallocha L., a mangrove species growing on the coastlines of the Indo-West Pacific region. Twenty natural populations of E. agallocha were sampled from the Malay Peninsula (central population), and in Southern China, North Australia, Sri Lanka and Southern Japan (peripheral populations). Our results showed that central populations from Malay Peninsula possessed significantly higher genetic diversity than the peripheral ones ( P < 0.05). Analysis of molecular variation (AMOVA) revealed that genetic variability was partitioned at 22.9% among regions, 23.6% among populations within regions, and 53.5% within populations. Genetic differentiation ( G ST = 0.300) among the six central populations was stronger than those from peripheral regions. Populations from North Australia clustered closely together in the dendrogram and were distinct from the rest of the populations. Those from Southern Japan, Southern China and Sri Lanka also clustered closely together, respectively. However, populations from Malay Peninsula did not cluster by region. The east coast populations of Malay Peninsula (including Pasir population) were more genetically similar to the populations from Southern China than those from the west coastline of Malay Peninsula. Our study suggests that ocean currents, land barriers, limited dispersal ability of seeds, and founder effect may play important roles in the distribution of genetic diversity in E. agallocha.
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