The ecological niche defines the favourable range of a species in a multidimensional space of ecological factors that determine the presence and function of individuals. This fundamental concept in ...ecology is widely used to understand plant species coexistence and segregation. In this study, we test for ecological differentiation among six annual
Lythrum
species that are characteristic of temporary pools in the South of France, where they either coexist or occur separately. We first analysed the co-occurrence of species at two different geographical scales: cluster analyses of species presence in 10 km grid cells and coexistence in 0.25 m
2
quadrats within populations of each species. Second, for three to nine populations of each species, we quantified a range of biotic and abiotic parameters using point contacts and soil measurements in five 0.25 m
2
quadrats per population. We performed PCA on all variables and analysed each variable separately to compare the ecological niche features of the six species. A phenological index was assessed for the plant community of each site. We detected highly localized niche differentiation in terms of soil pH (all species) and for a range of variables among pairs of species. The six species also showed marked differences in the flowering period relative to the mean and variability of flowering time in their local community. These fine-scaled niche differences are associated with phylogenetic distances among species and may contribute to species’ coexistence. These results are integrated in a conservation management plan for the habitat of the rarest species in this group.
Mediterranean temporary pools are threatened ecosystems that host a unique plant community, mostly composed of annual species with large and long-lived seed banks. The longevity of their seed bank, ...the scarcity of their habitat, the small size of their populations and the low frequency of above-ground vegetation result in a low probability of detection of these species. The discovery of new populations of such rare species are thus important for our understanding of the ecology of the temporary pool ecosystem. Lythrum thesioides M.Bieb., 1808 is a very rare annual species of temporary pools and river banks which was thought to be extinct in the South of France until 1998. Here, we review the distribution of the species and report the recent discovery of a population during a targeted search combining historical data on wetland occurrence on a particular geological substrate. We present new information on its autecology, pollen morphology and the karyotype. Only three populations are currently known worldwide for Lythrum thesioides, and only one of these has favorable management conditions. Thus, we outline new conservation perspectives in the context of a targeted search project and the conservation management of one population.
A family has been observed which a gene for heterocellular hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin (HPFH), probably identical to that previously described as Swiss type HPFH, has been inherited ...together with beta-thalassemia. The interaction of these two genes resulted in beta-thalassemia heterozygotes with unusually high levels of fetal hemoglobin (3.6-6.15), heterogeneously distributed. Globin synthesis studies showed a similar degree of chain imbalance in the heterocellular HPFH-beta thalassemia compound heterozygotes and in the heterozygous beta-thalassemia member of the family. On the basis of the pattern of genetic transmission of these two characters it can be concluded that the HPFH determinant does not behave as an allele of the gamma beta delta complex.