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Crop‐to‐wild hybridization in cherries—Empirical evidence from Prunus fruticosa

Crop cultivation can lead to genetic swamping of indigenous species and thus pose a serious threat for biodiversity. The rare Eurasian tetraploid shrub Prunus fruticosa (ground cherry) is suspected of hybridizing with cultivated allochthonous tetraploid P. cerasus and autochthonous diploid P. avium....

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Autores principales: Macková, Lenka, Vít, Petr, Urfus, Tomáš
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6183504/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30344640
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.12677
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author Macková, Lenka
Vít, Petr
Urfus, Tomáš
author_facet Macková, Lenka
Vít, Petr
Urfus, Tomáš
author_sort Macková, Lenka
collection PubMed
description Crop cultivation can lead to genetic swamping of indigenous species and thus pose a serious threat for biodiversity. The rare Eurasian tetraploid shrub Prunus fruticosa (ground cherry) is suspected of hybridizing with cultivated allochthonous tetraploid P. cerasus and autochthonous diploid P. avium. Three Prunus taxa (447 individuals of P. fruticosa, 43 of P. cerasus and 73 of P. avium) and their hybrids (198 individuals) were evaluated using analysis of absolute genome size/ploidy level and multivariate morphometrics. Flow cytometry revealed considerable differentiation in absolute genome size at the tetraploid level (average 2C of P. fruticosa = 1.30 pg, average 2C of P. cerasus = 1.42 pg, i.e., a 9.2% difference). The combination of methods used allowed us to ascertain the frequency of hybrids occurring under natural conditions in Central Europe. The morphological evaluation of leaves was based upon distance‐based morphometrics supplemented by elliptic Fourier analysis. The results provided substantial evidence for ongoing hybridization (hybrids occurred in 39.5% of P. fruticosa populations). We detected homoploid introgressive hybridization with alien P. cerasus at the tetraploid level. We also found previously overlooked but frequent triploid hybrids resulting from heteroploid hybridization with indigenous P. avium, which, however, probably represent only the F1 generation. Although both hybrids differ in ploidy, they cannot be distinguished using morphometrics. Hybrids are frequent and may endanger wild populations of genuine P. fruticosa via direct niche competition or, alternatively or in addition, via introgression at the homoploid level (i.e., genetic swamping). The cultivation of cherries thus substantially threatens the existence of genuine P. fruticosa.
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spelling pubmed-61835042018-10-19 Crop‐to‐wild hybridization in cherries—Empirical evidence from Prunus fruticosa Macková, Lenka Vít, Petr Urfus, Tomáš Evol Appl Original Articles Crop cultivation can lead to genetic swamping of indigenous species and thus pose a serious threat for biodiversity. The rare Eurasian tetraploid shrub Prunus fruticosa (ground cherry) is suspected of hybridizing with cultivated allochthonous tetraploid P. cerasus and autochthonous diploid P. avium. Three Prunus taxa (447 individuals of P. fruticosa, 43 of P. cerasus and 73 of P. avium) and their hybrids (198 individuals) were evaluated using analysis of absolute genome size/ploidy level and multivariate morphometrics. Flow cytometry revealed considerable differentiation in absolute genome size at the tetraploid level (average 2C of P. fruticosa = 1.30 pg, average 2C of P. cerasus = 1.42 pg, i.e., a 9.2% difference). The combination of methods used allowed us to ascertain the frequency of hybrids occurring under natural conditions in Central Europe. The morphological evaluation of leaves was based upon distance‐based morphometrics supplemented by elliptic Fourier analysis. The results provided substantial evidence for ongoing hybridization (hybrids occurred in 39.5% of P. fruticosa populations). We detected homoploid introgressive hybridization with alien P. cerasus at the tetraploid level. We also found previously overlooked but frequent triploid hybrids resulting from heteroploid hybridization with indigenous P. avium, which, however, probably represent only the F1 generation. Although both hybrids differ in ploidy, they cannot be distinguished using morphometrics. Hybrids are frequent and may endanger wild populations of genuine P. fruticosa via direct niche competition or, alternatively or in addition, via introgression at the homoploid level (i.e., genetic swamping). The cultivation of cherries thus substantially threatens the existence of genuine P. fruticosa. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018-07-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6183504/ /pubmed/30344640 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.12677 Text en © 2018 The Authors. Evolutionary Applications published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Macková, Lenka
Vít, Petr
Urfus, Tomáš
Crop‐to‐wild hybridization in cherries—Empirical evidence from Prunus fruticosa
title Crop‐to‐wild hybridization in cherries—Empirical evidence from Prunus fruticosa
title_full Crop‐to‐wild hybridization in cherries—Empirical evidence from Prunus fruticosa
title_fullStr Crop‐to‐wild hybridization in cherries—Empirical evidence from Prunus fruticosa
title_full_unstemmed Crop‐to‐wild hybridization in cherries—Empirical evidence from Prunus fruticosa
title_short Crop‐to‐wild hybridization in cherries—Empirical evidence from Prunus fruticosa
title_sort crop‐to‐wild hybridization in cherries—empirical evidence from prunus fruticosa
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6183504/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30344640
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.12677
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