Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Allopolyploidy in bryophytes: Multiple origins of Plagiomnium medium

1988; National Academy of Sciences; Volume: 85; Issue: 15 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1073/pnas.85.15.5601

ISSN

1091-6490

Autores

Robert Wyatt, Ireneusz J. Odrzykoski, Ann Stoneburner, Henry W. Bass, Glenn A. Galau,

Tópico(s)

Lichen and fungal ecology

Resumo

Bryophytes are thought to be unique among land plants in lacking the important evolutionary process of allopolyploidy, which involves interspecific hybridization and chromosome doubling. Electrophoretic data show, however, that the polyploid moss Plagiomnium medium is an allopolyploid derivative of Plagiomnium ellipticum and Plagiomnium insigne, that P. medium has originated more than once from these progenitors, and that cross-fertilization results in interlocus genetic recombination. Evidence from restriction fragment length polymorphisms in chloroplast DNA implicates P. insigne as the female parent in interspecific hybridizations with P. ellipticum. Contrary to prevailing views, it appears that those evolutionary processes responsible for genetic differentiation and speciation in other land plants occur in the bryophytes as well.

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