Abstract

The variability of six Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco var. menziesii) populations was studied with the help of needle flavonoids. Of the two proanthocyanidins and six flavonols detected and measured by high performance liquid chromatography, myricetin and prodelphinidin allowed partial separation of the sampled coastal Douglas-fir populations into three geographical groups. Even though conspicuous differences were found between the northernmost and southernmost provenances, flavonoid markers were insufficient to identify the origin of a coastal Douglas-fir population without ambiguity. In accordance with other genetic markers, it would be inappropriate to recognize races within the sampled area of coastal Douglas-fir. From a biogenetical point of view, the synthesis of prodelphinidin appears to be governed by a gene present in two codominant allelic forms. The alleles are differently expressed from one population to another in such a way that there is a latitudinal cline of prodelphinidin throughout the sampled coastal Douglas-fir populations. The gradual decrease of prodelphinidin from south to north tends to support the idea that coastal Douglas-fir has migrated in this same direction from ice-free refugia of the Wisconsin glaciation period. To confirm the latitudinal cline and the mode of inheritance of prodelphinidin in coastal Douglas-fir, additional populations should be analyzed and segregation data from known pedigrees should be obtained respectively.Key words: Pseudotsuga menziesii var. menziesii, Pinaceae, flavonoids, geographical variation.

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