Differential distribution of microsatellite allele frequencies in Koompassia malaccensis of contrasting habitat preferences

Not many tropical plant species growing on dry soil can thrive in the peat swamp habitat, Koompassia malaccensis is among the unique species. Koompassia malaccensis, or locally known as kempas, is one of the major commercial timber species in Southeast Asia. It has been the interest of ecologists to...

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Main Authors: Lee, Chai Ting, Lee, Soon Leong, Qamaruz Zaman, Faridah, Siraj, Siti Shapor, Ng, Kevin Kit Siong, Muhammad, Norwati
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/65133/1/PGM-1-13.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/65133/
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spelling my.upm.eprints.651332018-09-04T04:15:23Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/65133/ Differential distribution of microsatellite allele frequencies in Koompassia malaccensis of contrasting habitat preferences Lee, Chai Ting Lee, Soon Leong Qamaruz Zaman, Faridah Siraj, Siti Shapor Ng, Kevin Kit Siong Muhammad, Norwati Not many tropical plant species growing on dry soil can thrive in the peat swamp habitat, Koompassia malaccensis is among the unique species. Koompassia malaccensis, or locally known as kempas, is one of the major commercial timber species in Southeast Asia. It has been the interest of ecologists to know whether K. malaccensis found in the peat swamp and dry land are genetically distinct or their existence in such contrasting habitats is merely due to phenotypic plasticity. Findings from a population genetic study of K. malaccensis in 34 natural populations throughout Peninsular Malaysia revealed presence of ecotypic differentiation. A total of 20 microsatellite loci were analysed with an average of 29 samples per population. In the majority of the loci studied, a consistent trend was observed in the distribution of allele frequencies among the populations, in that the peat-swamp (Kuala Langat Selatan and Pekan) and non-peat-swamp populations shared different common alleles. In loci Kma057, Kma163 and Kma172a, the predominant alleles in the peat-swamp populations were either absent or in low frequencies (≤ 0.115) in the non-peat-swamp populations and vice versa. The significant divergence of allele frequencies at nuclear loci indicates that these two ecotypes are most likely of different evolutionarily significant units (ESUs). 2009 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/65133/1/PGM-1-13.pdf Lee, Chai Ting and Lee, Soon Leong and Qamaruz Zaman, Faridah and Siraj, Siti Shapor and Ng, Kevin Kit Siong and Muhammad, Norwati (2009) Differential distribution of microsatellite allele frequencies in Koompassia malaccensis of contrasting habitat preferences. In: 8th Malaysia Congress on Genetics, 4-6 Aug. 2009, Genting Highlands, Malaysia. (pp. 262-266).
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description Not many tropical plant species growing on dry soil can thrive in the peat swamp habitat, Koompassia malaccensis is among the unique species. Koompassia malaccensis, or locally known as kempas, is one of the major commercial timber species in Southeast Asia. It has been the interest of ecologists to know whether K. malaccensis found in the peat swamp and dry land are genetically distinct or their existence in such contrasting habitats is merely due to phenotypic plasticity. Findings from a population genetic study of K. malaccensis in 34 natural populations throughout Peninsular Malaysia revealed presence of ecotypic differentiation. A total of 20 microsatellite loci were analysed with an average of 29 samples per population. In the majority of the loci studied, a consistent trend was observed in the distribution of allele frequencies among the populations, in that the peat-swamp (Kuala Langat Selatan and Pekan) and non-peat-swamp populations shared different common alleles. In loci Kma057, Kma163 and Kma172a, the predominant alleles in the peat-swamp populations were either absent or in low frequencies (≤ 0.115) in the non-peat-swamp populations and vice versa. The significant divergence of allele frequencies at nuclear loci indicates that these two ecotypes are most likely of different evolutionarily significant units (ESUs).
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Lee, Chai Ting
Lee, Soon Leong
Qamaruz Zaman, Faridah
Siraj, Siti Shapor
Ng, Kevin Kit Siong
Muhammad, Norwati
spellingShingle Lee, Chai Ting
Lee, Soon Leong
Qamaruz Zaman, Faridah
Siraj, Siti Shapor
Ng, Kevin Kit Siong
Muhammad, Norwati
Differential distribution of microsatellite allele frequencies in Koompassia malaccensis of contrasting habitat preferences
author_facet Lee, Chai Ting
Lee, Soon Leong
Qamaruz Zaman, Faridah
Siraj, Siti Shapor
Ng, Kevin Kit Siong
Muhammad, Norwati
author_sort Lee, Chai Ting
title Differential distribution of microsatellite allele frequencies in Koompassia malaccensis of contrasting habitat preferences
title_short Differential distribution of microsatellite allele frequencies in Koompassia malaccensis of contrasting habitat preferences
title_full Differential distribution of microsatellite allele frequencies in Koompassia malaccensis of contrasting habitat preferences
title_fullStr Differential distribution of microsatellite allele frequencies in Koompassia malaccensis of contrasting habitat preferences
title_full_unstemmed Differential distribution of microsatellite allele frequencies in Koompassia malaccensis of contrasting habitat preferences
title_sort differential distribution of microsatellite allele frequencies in koompassia malaccensis of contrasting habitat preferences
publishDate 2009
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/65133/1/PGM-1-13.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/65133/
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score 13.1944895