Abstract

We provide a brief review of practices and relevant studies for restoration of Nymphoides peltata (yellow floating heart, Asaza), a distylous floating-leaf clonal plant, in Lake Kasumigaura, Japan to develop a model of integrated genetic and demographic conservation for threatened plants. Several theoretically expected issues, such as sudden extinction of small populations with low genetic diversity, limited seed production in small-sized local populations, and significantly high heterozygosity in adults that have survived environmental change, were ascertained through integrated studies on demography with discrimination of genets and genetics using highly polymorphic genetic markers. Investigation of genetic properties of the remnant soil seed bank suggested that the seed bank could potentially restore genetic diversity, although the fitness reduction of seed banks caused by inbreeding could affect the success of restoration. As a result of restoration efforts, increases in the number of local populations and genets in the Lake Kasumigaura metapopulation have led to population recovery.

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