Abstract

Pyrus calleryana var. dimorphophylla, a variety of Callery pear (Pyrus calleryana), is endemic to the Tokai district of central Japan, and is currently listed as “Endangered”. The remnant habitats and trees are of limited number, and highly fragmented. As the first step in determining appropriate conservation units, genetic diversity and differentiation in this species were investigated using chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) and nuclear simple sequence repeat (SSR) polymorphisms. All possible remnant trees were genotyped, then six populations were defined based on the results of cpDNA haplotype determination and Bayesian clustering approaches performed using the SSR locus data. Some trees appeared to originate from artificial propagation. Some individuals were difficult to differentiate genetically from the related species, Pyrus × uyematsuana, which is considered to be a hybrid between P. calleryana var. dimorphophylla and a possibly naturalized species, Pyrus pyrifolia, implying that introgression between these species may have occurred. In P. calleryana var. dimorphophylla, anthropogenic factors such as propagation and related species planting are probably major causes of complexity in the genetic structure.

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