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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Plant systematics and evolution 182 (1992), S. 35-70 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Brassicaceae ; Draba ; Draba alpina complex ; Draba crassifolia ; Enzyme electrophoresis ; allopolyploidy ; fixed heterozygosity ; inbreeding ; multiple origins ; polyphyly ; phylogeny ; phytogeography ; Flora of Scandinavia ; Svalbard
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract 104 populations of 15 Nordic species (2x–16x) of the taxonomically complex genusDraba were investigated using enzyme electrophoresis. The polyploids were genetic alloploids showing high levels of fixed heterozygosity and electrophoretic variation; the diploids were homozygous and genetically depauperate. Thus, the data suggest that alloploidy in arctic-alpineDraba serves as an escape from genetic depauperation caused by inbreeding at the diploid level. Although some populations probably have local alloploid origins, electrophoretic data indicate that several polyploids have migrated repeatedly into the Nordic area.Draba crassifolia (2n = 40) is probably octoploid based on x = 5. A hypothesis on the evolutionary history of the polyploids based on x = 8 is presented. Diploids contributing to numerous polyploid genomes and multiple origins of polyploids have seriously blurred taxonomic relationships. Relationships inferred from genetic data do not always correspond to those based on morphology; two morphologically very similar polyploids,D. alpina andD. oxycarpa, were, for example, genetically distant and probably represent independent lineages.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Plant systematics and evolution 185 (1993), S. 55-83 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Brassicaceae ; Draba ; Polyploidy ; fixed heterozygosity ; reproductive biology ; protogyny ; delayed selfing ; seed set ; inbreeding ; mixed mating ; Arctic-alpine plants
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract 132 cultivated populations (2x–16x) of 15 arctic-alpine species ofDraba were investigated to clarify a possible relationship between reproductive strategies and polyploid evolution in the genus. The populations were exclusively sexual and produced viable seed after spontaneous self-pollination, but showed large variation both in traits promoting cross-pollination and in autogamous fruit and seed set. Traits promoting cross-pollination, e.g., floral display, protogyny, and delayed selfing, were positively correlated, and these traits were negatively correlated with autogamous fruit and seed set. All diploid and many polyploid populations had high autogamous seed set and small, unscented, non-protogynous, and rapidly selfing flowers. In contrast, all populations with low autogamous seed set and large, scented, and strongly protogynous flowers with distinctly delayed selfing were polyploid. These results are consistent with those previously obtained from enzyme electrophoresis, suggesting that the genetically depauperate diploids are extreme inbreeders and that the highly fixed-heterozygous polyploids vary from extreme inbreeders to mixed maters. The reproductive data lend additional support to the hypothesis that allopolyploidy in arcticDraba serves as an escape from genetic depauperation caused by uniparental inbreeding at the diploid level.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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