Clonality Contributes To The Spread Of Avrainvillea Lacerata (Bryopsidales, Chlorophyta) In Hawaiʻi

Author ORCID

Stacy Krueger-Hadfield 0000-0002-7324-7448

Publication Date

8-30-2024

Abstract

The excel file includes all multilocus genotypes. The first sheet includes all raw multilocus genotypes prior to allele dosage estimation. The second sheet is in GenAPoPop format and includes all multilocus genotypes after allele dosage correction using allele peak height.

Population acronyms:

ewaA – ʻEwa Beach, Lagoon East

mlb – Maunalua Bay

ewaB – ʻEwa Beach, Kaloi

The code for each individual sampled during 2018, 2019, and 2021 is Av_sample # (01-260).

The code for each individual sampled during 2022 is Av_3-digit sample # (001-040).

The code for each individual sampled during 2023 is Av mound #_H holdfast #_B blade #.

This project was supported by Alabama Academy of Science student research award (to BMT), the Phycological Society of America Grant In Aid of Research (to BMT), the UAB Graduate Student Government (GSG) Professional Development and Travel Award (to BMT), the UAB Harold Martin Outstanding Student Development Award (to BMT), CLONIX-2D (ANR-18-CE32-0001 to SS and SAKH), start-up funds from the College of Arts and Sciences at UAB (to SAKH and MLH), the National Science Foundation (NSF) DEB-2113745 (to SAKH), and National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (#74235 to SAKH and HLS). SAKH was supported by the NSF CAREER award DEB-2141971 and the Norma Lang Early Career Fellowship from the Phycological Society of America.

Keywords

Clonality, Invasion, Life cycle, Non-native, Polyploidy, Seaweed, Population genetics, microsatellites

Repository

Zenodo

Distribution License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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