1980
DOI: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1980.tb04793.x
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PATTERNS OF ALLOZYMIC SIMILARITY IN ECOLOGICALLY CENTRAL AND MARGINAL POPULATIONS OF HORDEUM JUBATUM IN UTAH

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Cited by 39 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Periodic flooding and salinity fluctuations might produce conditions which are more favourable for seedling establishment. Action of natural selection on differentiation of marginal populations in H. jubatum has been suggested by Shumaker & Babble (1980). The limited regeneration from seeds in the UNI population means that the plants in this population are likely older than those in the ELS and FLO populations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Periodic flooding and salinity fluctuations might produce conditions which are more favourable for seedling establishment. Action of natural selection on differentiation of marginal populations in H. jubatum has been suggested by Shumaker & Babble (1980). The limited regeneration from seeds in the UNI population means that the plants in this population are likely older than those in the ELS and FLO populations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The greatest number of populations occurs in Taiwan where the species is widely distributed and adapted to a variety of habitats. Theoretical predictions and several empirical studies suggest that geographically and ecologically marginal populations should have lower genetic variability than centrally located populations (e.g., Schumaker and Babble 1980, Brunsfeld et a/. 1991, Tsumura and Ohba 1993.…”
Section: Conservation Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The observation of spermatogenic regions within female follicles as well as separated male and female gonadal regions within a single individual, and the completely dioecious central-range populations indicate that members of this genus possess a wide variety of reproductive modes, perhaps including self-fertilization. A similar reduction in heterozygosity and polymorphism has been observed in other potentially selffertilizing molluscs and plants (Selander & Hudson, 1976;Hornbach et al, 1980;McLeod & Sailstad, 1980;Shumaker & Babbel, 1980). This potential for selffertilization could have been instrumental in estalishment of this species' wide geographic range (North Carolina to Nova Scotia), although the existence of wide-ranging dioecious species indicate that the method of reproduction is only one of several variables important in range expansions.…”
Section: Patterns Observed Among Peripheral Populationsmentioning
confidence: 59%