2008
DOI: 10.1007/s10592-008-9678-y
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Genetic analysis of salt-marsh sedge Carex scabrifolia Steud. populations using newly developed microsatellite markers

Abstract: Nine microsatellite loci were isolated and characterized from the clonal salt-marsh sedge Carex scabrifolia, and genetic diversities within four populations were analyzed.

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The genetic diversity of C. pumila has been shown to be similar to or higher than that of the halophyte Spergularia media (H O : 0.546, H E : 0.698) [48] and other species such as Carex kobomugi (H O : 0.648, H E : 0.451) [23], Carex macrocephala (H O : 0.073, H E : 0.523) [24], and Carex scabrifolia (H O : 0.350, H E : 0.419) [49] of the genus Carex.…”
Section: Development Of Novel Microsatellite Markers For Population S...mentioning
confidence: 86%
“…The genetic diversity of C. pumila has been shown to be similar to or higher than that of the halophyte Spergularia media (H O : 0.546, H E : 0.698) [48] and other species such as Carex kobomugi (H O : 0.648, H E : 0.451) [23], Carex macrocephala (H O : 0.073, H E : 0.523) [24], and Carex scabrifolia (H O : 0.350, H E : 0.419) [49] of the genus Carex.…”
Section: Development Of Novel Microsatellite Markers For Population S...mentioning
confidence: 86%
“…Despite its enormous species diversity, only a few microsatellite markers have been specifically developed in the Carex genus. Initially, microsatellite markers studies targeted only few species (e.g., Carex scabrifolia, C. moorcroftii, C. helodes, C. angustisquama, C. kobomugi, C. macrocephala, C. pumila [27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34]), but more recently, 42 and 17 markers, respectively, were tested for 106 Carex accessions [33,35]. Almost all taxa included in these studies belong to the Carex or Vignea subgenera.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The number of alleles displayed by both populations of C. myosuroides in the case of these 13 SSR markers was lower compared with several other studies reporting SSR markers in the Carex genus. For example, an analysis of 14 microsatellite loci in six populations of C. kobomugi revealed two to eight alleles per marker [27], and another analysis of nine microsatellite loci in four populations of Carex scabrifolia reported two to seven alleles [28], whereas an analysis of 30 SSR markers in three populations of C. pumila discovered four to twelve alleles [34]. The low number of alleles and the high level of monomorphism were also reported by [32], for three populations of C. angustisquama, analysed using 20 SSR markers, resulting an average of one to five alleles per marker.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%