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Somatic mutation and the Antarctic ozone hole

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posted on 2024-11-14, 15:11 authored by Laurence Clarke, Sharon RobinsonSharon Robinson, D J Ayre
1 Previous studies of Antarctic clonal moss populations using RAPD markers have reported extraordinarily high levels of genetic variation. This has been claimed to reflect somatic mutation, possibly resulting from elevated UV-B radiation. 2 Our study used microsatellite markers to compare the genetic variation present within continental Antarctic, sub-Antarctic and temperate populations of the moss Ceratodon purpureus. 3 In contrast to the RAPD studies, microsatellite data revealed that C. purpureus populations from continental Antarctica display less intra-population genetic diversity than populations from a range of temperate and sub-Antarctic sites. 4 Analysis of Molecular Variation (AMOVA) revealed that populations within the Windmill Islands region of Antarctica were more genetically differentiated than populations spread among more widely separated temperate regions. 5 Synthesis Our data provide no evidence of elevated mutation rates in the Antarctic, and imply climate change will present ongoing challenges for continental Antarctic moss populations that appear weakly interconnected and with less potential than temperate populations to adapt to environmental change.

History

Citation

This article was originally published as Clarke, LJ, Robinson, SA and Ayre, DJ, Somatic mutation and the Antarctic ozone hole, Journal of Ecology, 96(2), 2008, 378-385. Copyright Blackwell-Synergy 2008. The definitive version is available here.

Journal title

Journal of Ecology

Volume

96

Issue

2

Pagination

378-385

Language

English

RIS ID

21975

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