“…Isoenzymes may have different allelic forms (allozymes), mostly selective neutrals and co-dominants, which could be used to quantify allelic frequencies and different measures of genetic variation. Some analyses have been done on a wide range of cycad species, for instance; Zamia pumila (Walters & Deckers-Walters, 1991), Macrozamia pauli-guilielmi complex (Sharma, Jones, Forster, & Young, 1998), the M. heteromera complex (Sharma, Jones, Forster, & Young, 1999), the M. plurinervia complex (Sharma, Jones, & Forster, 2004), nine Encephalartos species (Van Der Bank et al, 2001), Cycas seemannii (Keppel, Lee, & Hodgskiss, 2002) and five species of Dioon have been analyzed (González-Astorga, Vovides, Ferrer, & Iglesias, 2003;González-Astorga, Vovides, Cruz-Angón, Octavio-Aguilar, & Iglesias 2005; Cabrera-Toledo, González-Astorga et al, 2008;Cabrera-Toledo et al, 2010). Genetic variation and species relationships have been studied to a lesser extent with RAPD markers, which are dominants and highly polymorphic, examples are Encephalartos (Chaiprasongsuk et al, 2004), with AFLP, RFLP and RAPDs in Cycas (Mekanawakul & Juntawong, 2004;Sangin, Thongpan, Lindstrom, Sangduan, & Mingmuang, 2004).…”