Microsatellite Loci For Two East African Tree Species, Leptonychia Usambarensis (Sterculiaceae) and Sorindeia Madagascariensis (Anacardiaceae)

Abstract
We isolated 20 trinucleotide microsatellites from two African tree species: Sorindeia madagascariensis (nine microsatellites) and Leptonychia usambarensis (11 microsatellites). Number of alleles ranged from three to seven in Sorindeia and two to 10 in Leptonychia. Observed heterozygosity ranged from 0.025 to 0.829 for Sorindeia and from 0.226 to 0.933 for Leptonychia. Two loci from each species departed from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. These microsatellite markers will be used to study how forest fragmentation affects pollination and seed dispersal processes of these tree species.
Description
Full text can be accessed at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1755-0998.2008.02288.x/abstract;jsessionid=EE70A12CEA1E2BB29E9B761C3217F102.f02t02?userIsAuthenticated=false&deniedAccessCustomisedMessage=
Keywords
Dioecious, Eastern Arc Mountains, Hermaphrodite, Microsatellites, Tanzania Abstract
Citation
Cordeiro, N.J., Feldheim, K.A., Ikejimba, E. and Ndangalasi, H.J., 2008. Microsatellite loci for two East African tree species, Leptonychia usambarensis (Sterculiaceae) and Sorindeia madagascariensis (Anacardiaceae). Molecular ecology resources, 8(6), pp.1313-1315.