Genetic variation in the Red-Listed moss Ditrichum cornubicum Paton (Ditrichaceae) and implications for its conservation

2017 
Ditrichum cornubicum is a rare and threatened acrocarpous moss found on copper-rich mine waste, characteristic of the EU protected habitat ‘Calaminarian grassland of the Violetalia calaminariae’. The species was once thought to be a British endemic, being known from two former copper/tin mine sites in Cornwall, until the discovery of a population in 2006 at Allihies Mountain Mine, Co. Cork, Ireland, a former copper mine. In light of this discovery, two theories of possible introduction from Britain to Ireland were put forward: (1) an introduction from the 1800s and (2) a more recent introduction (2000s). Only male plants of the species are known, and reproduction and dispersal are therefore solely through asexual propagules and fragmentation. In order to address the conservation questions of the origin of the Irish population and to determine whether diversity exists within this rare species, genetic fingerprinting (amplified fragment length polymorphism) was carried out on the three known global populati...
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