SEXUAL REPRODUCTION AND GENETIC VARIATION IN THE SUBAERIAL ALGA CEPHALEUROS VIRESCENS (ULVOPHYCEAE, CHLOROPHYTA)

2000 
Cephaleuros virescens is a pantropical subaerial green alga with no known long-range dispersal mechanisms. Sexual reproduction is relatively rare and may involve intragametangial fusion of identical, mitotically produced gametes. This situation may be a consequence of adaptation to the subaerial habitat. Genetic variation among populations of C. virescens may be very low and might be positively correlated to the distance (hence, time) separating populations. Thus, assessing the global biogeography of C. virescens requires analysis of what might be low levels of variation. Because C. virescens occurs on literally hundreds of different host species, the question of host-races must also be considered. Preliminary analysis of local populations of C. virescens, originally obtained as field collections from three different host species and subsequently raised in culture, is the first step in addressing the biogeography of this alga. We are using the AFLP plant mapping protocol by PE Applied Biosystems to detect genetic variability in the three isolates of C. virescens. AFLP is a PCR-based DNA fingerprinting technique that detects the presence or absence of restriction fragments rather than fragment length differences. Because the number of restriction fragments that can be detected with the AFLP technique is “virtually unlimited,” it is a very powerful tool for assessing the degree of relatedness or variability among cultivars or isolates. AFLP techniques have been used successfully to distinguish morphologically identical bacteria, determine relatedness among soybean accessions, reveal genetic variability within bee samples, and identifyfall armyworm strains and hybrids.
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