Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/21657
Appears in Collections:Biological and Environmental Sciences eTheses
Title: Interactions between natural and anthropogenic impacts on the genetic diversity and population genetic structure of European beech forests
Author(s): Sjolund, M Jennifer
Supervisor(s): Jump, Alistair
Keywords: Genetic diversity
Fagus sylvatica
Beech
Spatial genetic structure
Population genetics
Gene flow
Forests
Conservation
Sylviculture
Management
Native
Isolation
Fragmentation
Phylogeography
Range limits
Bayesian Clustering
Issue Date: 2014
Publisher: University of Stirling
Citation: Sjölund, M.J. & Jump, A.S. (2015). Coppice management of forests impacts spatial genetic structure but not genetic diversity in European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.). Forest Ecology and Management. 336: 65-71.
Sjölund, M.J. & Jump, A.S. (2013). The benefits and hazards of exploiting vegetative regeneration for forest conservation management in a warming world. Forestry. 86: 503-513.
Abstract: The accurate assessment of forest persistence under environmental change is dependent on the fundamental understanding of the genetic consequences of human intervention and its comparison to that of natural processes, as declines in genetic diversity and changes in its structuring can compromise the adaptive ability of a population. The European beech, Fagus sylvatica, has experienced prolonged human impact over its 14 million ha range with contemporary forests harbouring high ecological, economic, and cultural value. Historical traditional management practices, such as coppicing and pollarding, have impacted a large portion of Europe’s forests. This form of management encouraged vegetative regeneration, prolonging the longevity of individual trees. In several cases, the structure and function of managed trees and their associated ecosystems were significantly altered. Specifically, coppiced beech forests in Europe displayed significantly larger extents of spatial genetic structuring compared to their natural counterparts, revealing a change in the genetic composition of the population due to decades of management. Humans have also aided in the dispersal of beech within and outside of its natural range. In Great Britain, the putative native range retained signals of past colonisation dynamics. However, these signals were obscured by the wide-spread translocation of the species throughout the country. Evidence of post-glacial colonisation dynamics can be found in Sweden as well. In contrast to Britain, the structure of this natural leading range edge displays a gradual reduction in population size where isolation was found to have acted as an effective barrier to gene flow reducing the genetic diversity of populations.
Type: Thesis or Dissertation
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/21657

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