Popis: |
Plant invasiveness, or the extensive spreading of a plant species into new and non-native areas, is an important and frequently discussed process in botany, influenced by many internal and external factors that determine how a plant will spread and how successful will the spreading be. One of the important factors affecting the level of invasiveness is the ability to hybridise and also ability to become polyploids, because via those processes plants acquire genetic variation that can provide advantageous predispositions for their dispersal. Plants and their spreads are also influenced by external ecological factors, i.e. the environment in which they grow, other species sharing the same habitat, and e.g. climate change or human activity, which change the environmental characteristics and therefore also the areas of distribution. The aim of this thesis is to find links between hybridisation and the success of plant dispersal, and subsequent invasiveness (i.e. the spread of a plant in a non-native range), by using the genus Rorippa as a model. The Central European lineage of lowland species of the genus Rorippa represents a suitable group to study these processes due to the frequency of hybridisation, the variability of ploidy levels and the previously detected invasiveness of one of the species (R.... |