The population structure of Thamnolia subuliformis and Dicranum elongatum in northeastern coastal regions of Wapusk National Park, Manitoba.

The population structure of a lichen, Thamnolia subuliformis and a moss, Dicranum elongatum, was examined in northeastern regions of Wapusk National Park. With the use of microsatellite molecular markers, it was reported that the sterile lichen had a level of variation similar to that of a sexually...

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Main Author: Cassie, David M.
Other Authors: Piercey-Normore, Michele D. (Botany), Renault, Sylvie (Botany) Markham, John (Botany) Hausner, Georg (Microbiology) Belland, Rene (Devonian Botanic Gardens, U of A)
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/301
id ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/301
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/301 2023-06-18T03:43:25+02:00 The population structure of Thamnolia subuliformis and Dicranum elongatum in northeastern coastal regions of Wapusk National Park, Manitoba. Cassie, David M. Piercey-Normore, Michele D. (Botany) Renault, Sylvie (Botany) Markham, John (Botany) Hausner, Georg (Microbiology) Belland, Rene (Devonian Botanic Gardens, U of A) 2007-01-08T15:46:41Z 10368344 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1993/301 eng eng http://hdl.handle.net/1993/301 open access Population structure Thamnolia subuliformis Dicranum elongatum microsatellites population subdivision Wapusk National Park fungi algae lichen-forming fungi bryophytes master thesis 2007 ftunivmanitoba 2023-06-04T17:46:45Z The population structure of a lichen, Thamnolia subuliformis and a moss, Dicranum elongatum, was examined in northeastern regions of Wapusk National Park. With the use of microsatellite molecular markers, it was reported that the sterile lichen had a level of variation similar to that of a sexually reproducing species. The variation reported for the moss, where sporophytes were not encountered, supported subdivided populations. It was concluded that these species have the genetic resources necessary to adapt to changing environmental conditions. February 2007 Master Thesis Wapusk national park MSpace at the University of Manitoba
institution Open Polar
collection MSpace at the University of Manitoba
op_collection_id ftunivmanitoba
language English
topic Population structure
Thamnolia subuliformis
Dicranum elongatum
microsatellites
population subdivision
Wapusk National Park
fungi
algae
lichen-forming fungi
bryophytes
spellingShingle Population structure
Thamnolia subuliformis
Dicranum elongatum
microsatellites
population subdivision
Wapusk National Park
fungi
algae
lichen-forming fungi
bryophytes
Cassie, David M.
The population structure of Thamnolia subuliformis and Dicranum elongatum in northeastern coastal regions of Wapusk National Park, Manitoba.
topic_facet Population structure
Thamnolia subuliformis
Dicranum elongatum
microsatellites
population subdivision
Wapusk National Park
fungi
algae
lichen-forming fungi
bryophytes
description The population structure of a lichen, Thamnolia subuliformis and a moss, Dicranum elongatum, was examined in northeastern regions of Wapusk National Park. With the use of microsatellite molecular markers, it was reported that the sterile lichen had a level of variation similar to that of a sexually reproducing species. The variation reported for the moss, where sporophytes were not encountered, supported subdivided populations. It was concluded that these species have the genetic resources necessary to adapt to changing environmental conditions. February 2007
author2 Piercey-Normore, Michele D. (Botany)
Renault, Sylvie (Botany) Markham, John (Botany) Hausner, Georg (Microbiology) Belland, Rene (Devonian Botanic Gardens, U of A)
format Master Thesis
author Cassie, David M.
author_facet Cassie, David M.
author_sort Cassie, David M.
title The population structure of Thamnolia subuliformis and Dicranum elongatum in northeastern coastal regions of Wapusk National Park, Manitoba.
title_short The population structure of Thamnolia subuliformis and Dicranum elongatum in northeastern coastal regions of Wapusk National Park, Manitoba.
title_full The population structure of Thamnolia subuliformis and Dicranum elongatum in northeastern coastal regions of Wapusk National Park, Manitoba.
title_fullStr The population structure of Thamnolia subuliformis and Dicranum elongatum in northeastern coastal regions of Wapusk National Park, Manitoba.
title_full_unstemmed The population structure of Thamnolia subuliformis and Dicranum elongatum in northeastern coastal regions of Wapusk National Park, Manitoba.
title_sort population structure of thamnolia subuliformis and dicranum elongatum in northeastern coastal regions of wapusk national park, manitoba.
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/301
genre Wapusk national park
genre_facet Wapusk national park
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1993/301
op_rights open access
_version_ 1769009800229683200