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Fine-scale genetic structure of grape phylloxera from the roots and leaves of Vitis |
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Author: Corrie, A. M.; Hoffmann, A. A.
Year: 2004
Title: Fine-scale genetic structure of grape
phylloxera from the roots and leaves of Vitis
Journal: Heredity
Volume: 92
Pages: 118-127
Date: Feb
Abstract: Patterns of variation at microsatellite
loci suggest that root populations of the pest grape phylloxera (Daktulosphaira
vitifoliae) are largely parthenogenetic in Australian vineyards. To investigate
reproduction in leaf galling phylloxera and the association between these
individuals and phylloxera on roots, we examined in detail genetic variation in
phylloxera from a vineyard block. Some genotypes found on leaf galls within
this block were not present on roots, whereas others spanned both zones. There
was no evidence that genotypes on roots were the product of sexual reproduction
in leaf galls. mtDNA variation was not associated with the location of the
phylloxera clones. The spatial distribution of genotypes within a root
population was further investigated by intensively sampling phylloxera from
another vineyard block. Join-count spatial autocorrelation statistics were used
to explore fine-scale spatial structure. Clones were nonrandomly distributed
within the block and there was evidence that the distribution of clones
followed rows. These findings suggest firstly that there is limited dispersal
of root and leaf feeding phylloxera, and secondly that factors, other than vine
host, are likely to be important and contribute to clonal structure within
populations.
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