Abstract
We assayed a subtropical population of Daphnia ambigua for genetic variation using protein electrophoresis (9 loci) and quantitative genetics approaches (life history characters). Our goal was to obtain information about relative levels of variation in a subtropical population, and compare them with extensive previous studies in the temperate and arctic zones. The observed level of allozymic variation (H = 0.11) was consistent with those previously observed in other temperate zone Daphnia populations. However, variation for quantitative traits (heritability) was lower than typically observed in previously-studied temperate populations: estimates were not statistically different from zero. Because allozyme heterozygosity was consistent with previous temperate zone estimates, and the polymorphic allozyme loci did not depart from the expectations of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, we concluded that a period of clonal selection was the most likely explanation for the low heritabilities observed. We do not conclude that this study provides evidence to suggest that subtropical populations harbor lower levels of genetic variation because of their location.
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Platt, T., Spitze, K. Genetic variation in a subtropical population of Daphnia. Hydrobiologia 435, 191–196 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1004189732741
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1004189732741