Picconia azorica is an endangered endemic species of the Azores whose hard and high density wood is very appreciated for the production of toys, agricultural tools, furniture and religious statuary. Its renewed economic interest represents a good opportunity for establishing conservation programmes. To contribute with information useful for the decision making we performed the genetic analysis of 230 samples from 11 populations collected in three Azorean islands. The majority of the genetic variability was found within populations and no genetic structure was detected between populations and between islands, indicating that the oceanic barriers do not greatly affect gene flow.
Two sets of markers and populations were considered in this study : (a) the variability at 17 protein loci and in the sequences of the first hypervariable segment of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) were compared in 10 South American Indian tribes, in a total 3016 and 241 individuals, respectively ; and (b) a triple comparison was made, in relation to 17 protein, mtDNA and six hypervariable tandem repeat loci in four Brazilian Indian tribes, involving 1567, 56 and 194 persons, respectively. Both the intrapopulational diversities and the population relationships obtained in these groups with these different sets of markers showed no significant correlation. High levels of heterogeneity were observed both at the protein and hypervariable individual loci, as well between mtDNA sites. The different positions observed for the Yanomama (but not for the other nine tribes) in the trees which summarized the protein and mtDNA data suggest some degree of asymmetric interchange related to sex between them and neighbouring tribes.
Genetic variability is ubiquitous and occurs at different levels of the biological hierarchy. But few studies have considered the relationship between the variation obtained with different approaches and involving diverse molecules. This question, however, is being increasingly considered lately. These investigations varied widely in the characteristics considered, sample sizes and number of populations studied. Thus, Rodriguez-Delfin et al. (1994) analysed data from 1025 adults belonging to four Brazilian tribes, examined for 12-16 anthropometric characteristics and 7-11 blood protein polymorphic loci,
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.