A. Westerbergh et A. Saura, GENETIC DIFFERENTIATION IN ENDEMIC SILENE (CARYOPHYLLACEAE) ON THE HAWAIIAN-ISLANDS, American journal of botany, 81(11), 1994, pp. 1487-1493
Endemic Hawaiian Silene colonize new lava flows and are outcompeted as
the ground ages. They illustrate the genetic processes operating in t
he evolution of pioneering island plants. The volcanic history of the
Hawaiian Islands allows an estimation of the age of these plant popula
tions. In this study, populations of S. struthioloides from Maul and t
he older part of the island of Hawaii, and S. hawaiiensis from the you
ngest volcanoes of the island of Hawaii were analyzed by enzyme electr
ophoresis. The genetic structures of these populations were placed in
a geographic and geologic context. Silene is much more polymorphic on
the older island, Maui. Genetic variation appears to have been lost in
the colonization of the youngest island, Hawaii. Interestingly, some
loci for populations on the younger volcanoes of the island of Hawaii
are monomorphic for alleles not found in populations on the older part
of Hawaii. Recurrent colonizations are accompanied with founder effec
ts, and restricted gene flow among populations has led to isolation an
d genetic drift. This has resulted in genetic and morphological differ
entiation of Silene populations on the youngest volcanoes.