Pollen dispersal from exotic eucalypt plantations

被引:0
|
作者
R. C. Barbour
B. M. Potts
R. E. Vaillancourt
机构
[1] University of Tasmania,School of Plant Science and CRC for Sustainable Production Forestry
来源
Conservation Genetics | 2005年 / 6卷
关键词
buffer distance; exotic species; gene flow; insect pollination;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The introgression of genes from exotic species or populations into gene pools of native species is a widespread concern in agricultural systems. This is also an issue of increasing importance in forest systems as there has been a dramatic expansion of tree plantations, which have now reached 180 million ha globally. This has recently occurred in Australia with eucalypts. To help assess the risk of genetic pollution, we assess the pattern of realised pollen dispersal from exotic Eucalyptus nitens plantations into native E. ovata forest in Tasmania. We assessed the frequency of F1 hybrids in open-pollinated seed collected from native E. ovata trees located at varying distance from three exotic E. nitens plantations in Tasmania. Over 119,000 seedlings were screened for morphological markers diagnostic of each species and the F1 hybrid. F1 hybridisation averaged 7.2% within 100 m of the exotic E. nitens, with one native tree reaching 56%, but diminished to 0.7% by 200–300 m and continued at this low level to the limits of the sampling at 1.6 km. The decay in the percentage of interspecific F1 hybridisation with distance followed a power function with a negative exponent (%F1 = 91.435distance−0.789; R2=0.84). Eucalyptus nitens is exclusively pollinated by small insects (smaller than honeybees), which the study shows can disperse pollen over 1.6 km. However, the restriction of most exotic F1 hybridisation to within 200 m of exotic plantations presents clear opportunities to manage the genetic impacts of plantations on native forests.
引用
收藏
页码:253 / 257
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] INTRASPECIFIC COMPETITION IN IRRIGATED AND FERTILIZED EUCALYPT PLANTATIONS
    TOME, M
    TOME, JA
    ARAUJO, MC
    PEREIRA, JS
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 1994, 69 (1-3) : 211 - 218
  • [32] Nutrient Management for Eucalypt Plantations in South China
    KU Daping Bernie DELL1. Research Institute of Tropical Forestry
    Chinese Forestry Science and Technology, 2002, (01) : 33 - 45
  • [33] Diseases of eucalypt plantations in China: challenges and opportunities
    Zhou, X. D.
    Xie, Y. J.
    Chen, S. F.
    Wingfield, M. J.
    FUNGAL DIVERSITY, 2008, 32 : 1 - 7
  • [34] LEAF CUTTING ANTS OUTSIDE THE EUCALYPT PLANTATIONS
    Magistrali, Iris Cristiane
    dos Anjos, Norivaldo
    CIENCIA FLORESTAL, 2011, 21 (02): : 349 - 354
  • [35] Eucalypt plantations in monsoonal tropics - Kerala, India
    Sankaran, KV
    SITE MANAGEMENT AND PRODUCTIVITY IN TROPICAL PLANTATION FORESTS, WORKSHOP PROCEEDINGS, 1999, : 45 - 51
  • [36] CARBON STORAGE IN THE SOIL AND IN THE BIOMASS OF EUCALYPT PLANTATIONS
    Gatto, Alcides
    de Barros, Nairam Felix
    Novais, Roberto Ferreira
    da Siva, Ivo Ribeiro
    Leite, Helio Garcia
    Leite, Fernando Palha
    de Albuquerque Villani, Ecila Maria
    REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE CIENCIA DO SOLO, 2010, 34 (04): : 1069 - 1079
  • [37] Effectiveness of eucalypt plantations as a surrogate habitat for birds
    Calvino-Cancela, Maria
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2013, 310 : 692 - 699
  • [38] Assessing expected economic losses from wildfires in eucalypt plantations of western Brazil
    Galizia, Luiz Felipe
    Alcasena, Fermin
    Prata, Gabriel
    Rodrigues, Marcos
    FOREST POLICY AND ECONOMICS, 2021, 125
  • [39] Assessment and monitoring of damage from insects in Australian eucalypt forests and commercial plantations
    Stone, C
    Coops, NC
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY, 2004, 43 : 283 - 292
  • [40] Diversity of exotic ectomycorrhizal Rhizopogon from pine plantations in Patagonia
    Belen Pildain, Maria
    Visnovsky, Sandra B.
    Barroetavena, Carolina
    MYCOLOGIA, 2019, 111 (05) : 782 - 792