Hybridization rate and genotypic diversity of apomictic hybrids between native (Taraxacum japonicum) and introduced (T. officinale) dandelions in western Japan
Autor: | Tsuyoshi Harata, Satoshi Nanami, Akira Itoh, Miki Morimoto, Shuhei Matsuyama |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine biology Biodiversity food and beverages biology.organism_classification 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences Taraxacum japonicum 03 medical and health sciences 030104 developmental biology Apomixis Botany Backcrossing Genetics Biological dispersal Taraxacum platycarpum Ploidy human activities Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics Hybrid |
Zdroj: | Conservation Genetics. 19:181-191 |
ISSN: | 1572-9737 1566-0621 |
Popis: | Hybridization between the introduced and native plants may enhance invasiveness, especially in asexually reproducing species. Hybrid apomictic dandelions between native (Taraxacum platycarpum and T. japonicum) and exotic (T. officinale) species are distributed widely throughout Japan. To estimate the origin(s) and dispersal of the hybrids, we investigated the hybridization rate and genotypic diversity in mixed populations of T. japonicum, T. officinale and their hybrids at two green parks in western Japan. Among the plants identified as exotics from flower morphology, 86–96% were hybrids by genetic analysis. Genetic data with simple sequence repeat markers revealed a high clonal diversity of the hybrid both within and between populations, indicating multiple origins. A hybrid seed was found from among the 1891 seeds collected from T. japonicum in the parks, indicating ongoing hybridization in the field. T. officinale and hybrids were genetically differentiated between the two parks independent of the ploidy level; the allele frequency of T. officinale and tri- and tetraploid hybrids were similar within each park but different between the two parks. This suggests that the origins of hybrids were similar within the park but different between the parks. Overall, our results suggest that hybridization, including backcross, is an ongoing process, and that genetically diverse hybrids with various origins have been spreading in western Japan, probably because hybridization enhanced invasiveness at native habitat. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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