Abstract

Delphinium viridescens Leiberg (Ranunculaceae) is a narrow endemic, known from only 17 populations in the Wenatchee Mountains of central Washington. Electrophoretic data for ten loci and approximately 50 plants from each of the 17 populations indicate high levels of variability both within and among populations. High levels of heterozygosity, coupled with a general conformance of genotype frequencies to Hardy‐Weinberg expectations, suggest that D. viridescens is an outcrossing species, and outcrossing rates range from 0.391 to 1.454. Although all populations share a suite of common alleles, interpopulational differences in allele frequency were detected. Nei's genetic identities range from 0.883 to 1.000, with a mean of 0.964, suggesting only slight differentiation among populations and at least moderate levels of interpopulational gene flow. However, FST values indicate greater interpopulational heterogeneity. The data from this study are intended for use in developing a management plan for D. viridescens, to maintain the viability of this species, and to assess the need for its listing as threatened or endangered.

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