Abstract
Agamospermy, which is almost always associated with polyploidy, is often assumed to reduce variation and foster evolution of microspecies. We tested for the occurrence of microspecies by comparing variation of sexual Amelanchier bartramiana and facultatively agamospermous (asexually seed-producing) Amelanchier laevis. We assessed within- and among-population variation of 222 individuals from six Maine populations of each species for eight morphological variables. Mahalanobis distances between individuals and population centroids and between population centroids and species centroids were used as measures of within- and among-population variation, respectively. Amelanchier bartramiana contains significantly more within- and among-population morphological variation than A. laevis. The two species do not differ in how they partition morphological variation within and among populations. Amelanchier laevis thus does not contain microspecies. Variation within A. laevis may be the result of sexuality, hybridization, polyploidy, and other factors. Key words: Amelanchier, agamospermy, Levene's statistic, microspecies, variation.
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