The island oak, Quercus tomentella Engelmann, is a species endemic to five of the eight California Channel Islands and
Results/Conclusions
Our results suggest that Q. tomentella maintains moderate levels of genetic diversity despite having small, declining populations and low effective population sizes. However, Q. tomentella exhibits striking levels of population differentiation, both among stands on an island and among islands. Such structure is very unusual for temperate oaks, where wind-dispersed pollen typically provides reproductive connectivity over large spatial scales. Further complicating measures of genetic diversity, clonal reproduction occurs in Q. tomentella. Regeneration in some stands is primarily from acorns, and primarily from clonal growth in others, but tree growth form does not clearly distinguish this difference. Thus stem counts alone will overestimate population size and genetic surveys are needed to determine actual population sizes. Introduced ungulate herbivores have recently been eliminated from several of the islands, providing an opportunity for Q. tomentella recovery. Spatial genetic data provided by microsatellites data will help managers target stands for management and seed sources.