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(American Journal of Botany. 1999;86:1209-1216.)
© 1999 Botanical Society of America, Inc.

Heritable variation and mechanisms of inheritance of spore shape within a population of Scutellospora pellucida, an arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus1

James D. Bever 2, 4 and Joseph Morton 3

2Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, 321 Steinhaus Hall,Irvine, California 92697-2525; and 3Division of Plant and Soil Sciences, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia 26506-6057

Substantial variation was found among single-spore cultures established from a single population of the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Scutellospora pellucida. A common environment experiment demonstrated that five single-spore cultures differed in their average spore shape (as measured by length:width ratios) and size (volume) with interisolate heritabilities of offspring mean values of 0.96 and 0.87, respectively (0.66 and 0.43 for the shape and size of individual spores). The distribution of offspring spore shapes also differed in levels of variance, skewness, and kurtosis. In fact, these aspects of the distributions shifted with mean spore shape as predicted by the binomial distribution—the distribution expected due to the segregation of genetically diverse nuclei through dividing hyphae. Thus, the original parental spores generating these cultures appear to have contained genetically variable nuclei, which then segregate into the offspring spores to generate consistent differences in the mean, variance, skewness, and kurtosis of the distribution of offspring spore shapes. This nuclear segregation may be followed by the assemblage of novel combinations of nuclei through hyphal fusion. Together these processes are rarely considered mechanisms for the creation of novel genetic combinations and may contribute to the maintenance of the high level of heritable variation observed in this study.

Key Words: arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi; • asexuality; • genetic variation; • glomalean fungi; • heritabilities; • heterokaryon; • spore morphology




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