Searching for gene flow from cultivated to wild strawberries in Central Europe |
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Authors: | Schulze Juerg Stoll Peter Widmer Alex Erhardt Andreas |
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Affiliation: | 1Department of Environmental Sciences, Section Conservation Biology (NLU), University of Basel, St. Johanns-Vorstadt 10, 4056 Basel, Switzerland;2Institute of Integrative Biology, Plant Ecological Genetics, ETH Zurich, Universitätstr. 16, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland |
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Abstract: | Background and AimsExperimental crosses between the diploid woodland strawberry (Fragaria vesca L.) and the octoploid garden strawberry (F. × ananassa Duch.) can lead to the formation of viable hybrids. However, the extent of such hybrid formation under natural conditions is unknown, but is of fundamental interest and importance in the light of the potential future cultivation of transgenic strawberries. A hybrid survey was therefore conducted in the surroundings of ten farms in Switzerland and southern Germany, where strawberries have been cultivated for at least 10 years and where wild strawberries occur in the close vicinity.MethodsIn 2007 and 2008, 370 wild F. vesca plants were sampled at natural populations around farms and analysed with microsatellite markers. In 2010, natural populations were revisited and morphological traits of 3050 F. vesca plants were inspected. DNA contents of cell nuclei of morphologically deviating plants were estimated by flow cytometry to identify hybrids. As controls, 50 hybrid plants from interspecific hand-crosses were analysed using microsatellite analysis and DNA contents of cell nuclei were estimated by flow cytometry.Key ResultsNone of the wild samples collected in 2007 and 2008 contained F. × ananassa microsatellite markers, while all hybrids from hand-crosses clearly contained markers of both parent species. Morphological inspection of wild populations carried out in 2010 and subsequent flow cytometry of ten morphologically deviating plants revealed no hybrids.ConclusionsHybrid formation or hybrid establishment in natural populations in the survey area is at best a rare event. |
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Keywords: | Fragaria vesca Fragaria × ananassa hybridization microsatellite markers genetically modified organisms gene flow |
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