Humans have exploited forests for thousands of years as they seek to use forest species as
 resources for food, fuel and timber, or to clear forested land for agricultural and urban purposes.
 In modern times, forests exposed to intensive human disturbance are the species-rich tropical
 forest ecosystems. For instance, Nigeria has the world's highest deforestation rate of primary
 forests. Between 2000 and 2005, 55.7 percent of primary forests in the country, defined as
 forests with no visible signs of past or present human activities, were lost as a result of human
 activities such as logging, subsistence agriculture, and the collection of fuelwood. Since genetic
 diversity within species is crucial for their long-term survival, conservation of genetic diversity
 in tree species should be given high priority. For effective conservation of genetic diversity in
 tree species in a country where prevalent human activities are shrinking its forests, effects of
 human activities on genetic diversity in tree species need to be analysed.
 This dissertation aims at analysing and comparing effects of human impacts on genetic diversity
 in Mansonia altissima A. Chev. and Triplochiton scleroxylon K. Schum. Mansonia altissima and
 Triplochiton scleroxylon are important West African timber tree species of family Sterculiaceae
 with contrasting successional status. Mansonia altissima is a non-pioneer light demanding tree
 species, characteristically more abundant in closed forests, whereas Triplochiton scleroxylon is a
 pioneer species predominant in open forests. Since human disturbances tend to have opposite
 impacts on the regeneration potential of these two species, also different effects on genetic
 diversity levels were expected. Fresh leaves of adult trees and saplings of both species were
 collected from the same plots in Akure Forest Reserve, Nigeria namely: an isolated forest patch,
 a logged forest and a primary forest with no visible signs of past or present human activities.
 Additionally, samples were collected from a plantation for M. altissima and a farmland
 population for T. scleroxylon. DNA isolated from the leave samples was analysed by Amplified
 Fragment Length Polymorphism (AFLP) markers.
 The result showed that the pioneer species Triplochiton scleroxylon (He = 0.267; PPL = 63.1; Br
 = 1.450) is by far more variable than the non-pioneer light demanding species Mansonia
 altissima (He = 0.045; PPL = 16.8; Br = 1.162). With regard to the effect of human impact on the
 genetic diversity, contrasting results were obtained for the two species. For Mansonia altissima,
 the highest diversity was observed in the Primary Forest (He = 0.062; PPL = 21.0; Br = 1.204),
 while the lowest estimate was found in the isolated forest patch (He = 0.032; PPL = 9.0; Br =
 1.089). Conversely, for Triplochiton scleroxylon, the diversity estimates were lowest in the
 primary forest (He = 0.249; PPL = 59.1; Br = 1.211) and highest in the isolated forest patch (He =
 0.277; PPL = 67.2; Br = 1.625). Genetic differentiation among populations in the two species
 was weak (Mansonia altissima ΦST = 0.039; Triplochiton scleroxylon ΦST = 0.041). In the
 spatial genetic structure analyses, a significant spatial genetic structure was found only in logged
 and isolated patch populations of Mansonia altissima.
 In the context of other studies, it can be assumed that tropical non-pioneer tree species are likely
 to show a lower genetic diversity than tropical pioneer species. In addition, results from this
 study suggest that non-pioneer tree species might be more susceptible to genetic erosion due to
 adverse human impacts than pioneer tree species. From a conservation point of view, the low
 genetic diversity in Mansonia altissima suggests that the maintenance of genetic diversity in M.
 altissima requires urgent attention, and the scale of human impact in the study area could pose a
 serious threat to the future viability of Mansonia altissima if no conservation measures are taken.
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