38 research outputs found

    Pinus phenotypic data and locality descriptions

    No full text
    Phenotypes (serotiny and tree diameter) and locality descriptors (stand, coordinates, etc) for 367 Pinus halpensis and 194 Pinus pinster individuals from SE Spain. Please note: these data are a subset of the dataset originally collected by Hernández-Serrano et al. (2013) Fire structures pine serotiny at different scales. American Journal of Botany 100, 2349-2356

    Gmatrix P.pinaster

    No full text
    Tab-delimited text file with symetrical matrix showing pairwise relatedness estimates for 194 individuals of Pinus pinaster. Diagonal estimates are included. Estimates are based on 251 SNPs and were estimated with the synbreed package in R

    Frequency histograms of effective pollination distances (black bars) estimated via paternity analysis and pairwise distances between males and the sampled mother plants (white bars).

    No full text
    <p>Frequency histograms of effective pollination distances (black bars) estimated via paternity analysis and pairwise distances between males and the sampled mother plants (white bars).</p

    Wind rose percentage frequency histograms of (A) the direction of mating events detected in the paternity analysis, (B) the direction of random potential mating events (i.e. just conditioned by the spatial location of males and females), and (C) the direction of winds during the flowering season.

    No full text
    <p>Wind rose percentage frequency histograms of (A) the direction of mating events detected in the paternity analysis, (B) the direction of random potential mating events (i.e. just conditioned by the spatial location of males and females), and (C) the direction of winds during the flowering season.</p

    Average pairwise kinship coefficients (<i>F<sub>ij</sub></i>) for adult plants plotted against spatial distance in the studied fragmented landscape (circles) and in a previously-studied large continuous population (squares; reanalysed from [<b>10</b>]).

    No full text
    <p>Error bars represent approximate 95% confidence intervals and empty symbols mean they are significantly different from the null hypothesis of no spatial structure assessed trough permutation procedures (1000 permutations). Symbols have been slightly scrolled to facilitate visualization.</p

    Genetic diversity parameters for <i>Pistacia lentiscus</i> adult plants genotyped at seven microsatellite loci.

    No full text
    **<p><i>P</i><0.01;</p>***<p><i>P</i><0.001;</p>ns<p>not significant.</p><p>Number of alleles (<i>A</i>), expected heterozigosity (<i>H<sub>e</sub></i>), Weir and Cockerham’s (1984) inbreeding coefficient (<i>f</i>), null allele frequency (<i>Null</i>) and exclusion probability for paternity analysis (<i>Exc</i>).</p

    Individual relative fecundities of the 164 <i>Pistacia lentiscus</i> male plants estimated using Klein’s Mixed Effect Mating model.

    No full text
    <p>Different shades refer to male plants occurring in different landscape typologies: dense tree canopy (black), sparse shrublands (grey), and linear hedges (white). Bars represent the 95% credibility intervals.</p

    Aerial photography of the study site (black square) embedded in a highly anthropogenic area (A).

    No full text
    <p>Close up of the study site showing the 164 reproductive <i>Pistacia lentiscus</i> males (white circles) and the 29 mother plants (white triangles) sampled for mating and paternity analyses (B). Network of effective pollination events detected between males (dots) and females (triangles) in the paternity analysis (C). Red dots in panel B mark the position of males siring at least four seeds (see text for details).</p

    Semi-natural reciprocal sowing experiment established in maritime pine to study local adaptation at early stages of establishment.

    No full text
    <p>Experimental sites and population's origin are shown in red triangles. Climodiagrams (mean monthly temperature in red and monthly precipitation in blue) of both sites are also given (data from the Spanish National Meteorological Agency, after corrections using Gonzalo's phitoclimatic model for Spain <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0109132#pone.0109132-GonzaloJimnez1" target="_blank">[44]</a>). The experimental design (in the center of the figure) consisted in a split-plot with four replicates in each microenvironment (open canopy, exemplified in the photo on the left side; and closed canopy, the photo on the right side); dark grey and light grey boxes represent the two origins tested (Coca and Calderona).</p
    corecore