Genetic evidence for hybridization between the native Spartina maritima and the introduced Spartina alterniflora (Poaceae) in South-West France: Spartina × neyrautii re-examined

被引:0
|
作者
A. Baumel
M. L. Ainouche
M. T. Misset
J-P. Gourret
R. J. Bayer
机构
[1] Institut Méditerranéen d'Ecologie et Paléoécologie,
[2] Bâtiment Villemin,undefined
[3] Domaine du Petit Arbois,undefined
[4] Aix-Les Milles,undefined
[5] France,undefined
[6] UMR CNRS 6553 Université de Rennes 1. Research Group “Populations and Species Evolution”,undefined
[7] Campus de Beaulieu,undefined
[8] Rennes,undefined
[9] France,undefined
[10] Molecular Systematics Lab. CSIRO Plant Industry,undefined
[11] Canberra ACT,undefined
[12] Australia,undefined
来源
Plant Systematics and Evolution | 2003年 / 237卷
关键词
Key words: Hybridization, Spartina × neyrautii, RAPD, ISSR, cpDNA.;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
 Spartina alterniflora, a perennial grass native to the North American Atlantic coast, was introduced during the 19th century in western Europe (Southern England and western France) where it hybridized with the native Spartina maritima. In England, the sterile hybrid S. × townsendii gave rise by chromosome doubling to the highly fertile allopolyploid Spartina anglica, which has now invaded many salt marshes and estuaries in western Europe, and has been introduced in several continents. In South-West France, another sterile hybrid was discovered in 1892 in the Bidassoa Estuary, and named Spartina × neyrautii. According to their morphology, some authors suggested that S. × neyrautii and S. × townsendii result from reciprocal crosses. During the 20th century, the hybridization site was severely disturbed, and surviving of S. × neyrautii was questioned. In this paper, various Spartina populations are investigated in the Basque region (France and Spain), and compared to the hybrid taxa formed in England (S. × townsendii and S. anglica). The samples were analyzed using molecular fingerprinting (RAPD and ISSR) and Chloroplast DNA sequence (trnL-trnT spacer, trnL intron and trnL-trnF spacer). In the Bidassoa estuary, a hybrid isolated clone has been found, that displays additive species-specific nuclear markers of S. maritima and S. alterniflora, and that is subsequently considered as a surviving clone of S. × neyrautii. The molecular analyses indicate that S. × neyrautii and S. × townsendii share the same maternal (S. alterniflora), and paternal (S. maritima) parental species, but also that the two independent hybridization events have involved different parental (nuclear) genotypes in England and in South-West France.
引用
收藏
页码:87 / 97
页数:10
相关论文
共 4 条