Natural hybridization in the Andropogon lateralis complex (Andropogoneae,Poaceae) and its impact on taxonomic literature |
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Authors: | GUILLERMO A. NORRMANN |
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Abstract: | In north‐eastern Argentina, Paraguay and south‐eastern Brazil, morphologically intermediate plants involving Andropogon lateralis, A. bicornis, A. glaziovii, A. arenarius and A. hypogynus were found. The possibility that they were natural hybrids was tested in two ways: (1) where they were sterile, their morphology was compared with that of the putative parents, and their meiosis and reproductive behaviour were studied; (2) where they were fertile, studies of artificial hybrids were also made. Most of the hybrids were sterile. The only fully fertile combination, generating recombination and hybrid swarms, was A. lateralis × A. hypogynus. In spite of apparently normal chromosome pairing, fertility was low in all other combinations on both the male and female sides. Sterility is probably a result of ‘cryptic’ or ‘gametic sterility’, which produces complete sterility of the gametes. Many of the hybrids survive and compete successfully with the parental species in natural populations, but their sterility maintains the genetic isolation of the majority of the taxa involved. Meiotic chromosome behaviour in all the hybrids indicates that the group of species shares slightly different forms of three basic genomes. Several specimens of natural hybrids were found in historical herbarium collections. In the past, they were given the status of type specimens of at least five taxonomic entities (A. lindmanii, A. coloratus, A. lateralis var. subtilior, A. multiflorus and A. lateralis var. bogotensis). The taxonomic consequences of these findings are discussed. © 2009 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2009, 159 , 136–154. |
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Keywords: | bluestems genomes Gramineae polyploidy reproduction South America |
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