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1.
Evolution ; 54(3): 828-39, 2000 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10937256

RESUMO

The vascular-plant flora of the Hawaiian Islands is characterized by one of the highest rates of species endemism in the world. Among flowering plants, approximately 89% of species are endemic, and among pteridophytes, about 76% are endemic. At the single-island level, however, rates of species endemism vary dramatically between these two groups with 80% of angiosperms and only 6% of pteridophytes being single-island endemics. Thus, in many groups of Hawaiian angiosperms, it is possible to link studies of phylogeny, evolution, and biogeographic history at the interspecific and interisland levels. In contrast, the low level of single-island species endemism among Hawaiian pteridophytes makes similar interspecific and interisland studies nearly impossible. Higher levels of interisland gene flow may account for the different levels of single-island endemism in Hawaiian pteridophytes relative to angiosperms. The primary question we addressed in the present study was: Can we infer microevolutionary patterns and processes among populations within widespread species of Hawaiian pteridophytes wherein gene flow is probably common? To address this broad question, we conducted a population genetic study of the native Hawaiian colonizing species Odontosoria chinensis. Data from allozyme analyses allowed us to infer: (1) significant genetic differentiation among populations from different islands; (2) historical patterns of dispersal between particular pairs of islands; (3) archipelago-level patterns of dispersal and colonization; (4) founder effects among populations on the youngest island of Hawaii; and, (5) that this species primarily reproduces via outcrossing, but may possess a mixed-mating system.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Variação Genética , Plantas/genética , Frequência do Gene , Havaí , Filogenia
2.
Evolution ; 48(4): 1364-1370, 1994 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28564453

RESUMO

The extreme isolation and mid-Pacific origin of the Hawaiian archipelago has ensured that all indigenous organisms have arrived via long-distance dispersal or have evolved from successfully colonizing species. Although this isolation has also produced high rates of species endemism in angiosperms (89% or more), that rate in pteridophytes is considerably less (76%). The ratio of native species to the estimated number of original successful colonizing species in angiosperms (3.4) is more than double that for pteridophytes (1.6). One possible explanation for the lower speciation rate in pteridophytes is that populations of these species are more likely to experience interpopulational gene flow because of the great vagility of their wind-dispersed spores. We conducted isozymic surveys of populations from the island of Hawaii of the indigenous allotetraploid species Asplenium adiantum-nigrum, putatively derived from two strictly European diploid taxa. Our data support multiple hybrid origins for the populations surveyed, with a minimum of 3, and possibly as many as 17, discrete hybridization events having produced the genetic diversity observed. Since the parental taxa are not found in Hawaii, each hybrid lineage must have arrived in the archipelago independently of the others. Similar long-distance, repeated dispersal events may be occurring between insular and noninsular populations of other native pteridophytes in Hawaii and in other insular regions of the world, thus contributing to the relatively low rates of speciation and insular endemism in this ancient group of plants.

3.
Demography ; 21(3): 271-95, 1984 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6383886

RESUMO

We analyze a 140-year series of smallpox deaths in the Aland Islands, Finland. Vaccination, introduced in 1805, dramatically reduced the annual number of smallpox deaths. It also influenced the age distribution of smallpox deaths, changing smallpox from a childhood disease before 1805 to one which affected both adults and children after 1805. This appears to be due to the fact that Alanders were usually vaccinated only once during childhood and often lost their immunity during adulthood. Spectral analysis of the prevaccination time series of smallpox deaths demonstrates a strong seven-year periodicity, reflecting the amount of time necessary to build up a cohort of nonimmune individuals. After the introduction of vaccination, the periodicity changes to eight years. The probability that a parish in Aland was affected by a smallpox epidemic is shown to be highly correlated with migration patterns and parish population sizes.


Assuntos
Varíola/história , Finlândia , História do Século XVIII , História do Século XIX , Humanos , Varíola/mortalidade , Vacina Antivariólica/história
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