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Patterns of seed polymorphism and allozyme variation in the bladder campions, Silene vulgaris and silene uniflora (caryophyllaceae)

Runyeon, H. LU and Prentice, H. C. LU orcid (1997) In Canadian Journal of Botany 75(11). p.1868-1886
Abstract

Seed morphology (testa ornamentation and seed shape) and allozyme variation were investigated in three closely related and partially sympatric taxa of Silene in the Nordic region. Within this region, Silene vulgaris is a widespread weed of anthropogenic habitats. The two subspecies of Silene uniflora are restricted to naturally open habitats; ssp. uniflora has a coastal distribution, whereas the Swedish endemic, ssp. petraea, is restricted to limestone habitats on the islands of Oland and Gotland. All three taxa show a seed ornamentation polymorphism, with individuals producing either tubercled or smooth ('armadillo') seeds. Both seed morphology and allozymes show a separation between the two species Silene vulgaris and Silene uniflora... (More)

Seed morphology (testa ornamentation and seed shape) and allozyme variation were investigated in three closely related and partially sympatric taxa of Silene in the Nordic region. Within this region, Silene vulgaris is a widespread weed of anthropogenic habitats. The two subspecies of Silene uniflora are restricted to naturally open habitats; ssp. uniflora has a coastal distribution, whereas the Swedish endemic, ssp. petraea, is restricted to limestone habitats on the islands of Oland and Gotland. All three taxa show a seed ornamentation polymorphism, with individuals producing either tubercled or smooth ('armadillo') seeds. Both seed morphology and allozymes show a separation between the two species Silene vulgaris and Silene uniflora and support the present taxonomic treatment of the endemic 'petraea' as a subspecies of Silene uniflora. Tubercled seeds predominate in Silene vulgaris and armadillo seeds predominate in Silene uniflora. However, there is considerable between-population variation in seed morph frequencies within taxa. In contrast to the other two taxa, populations of Silene uniflora ssp. petraea consistently show intermediate frequencies of both seed morphs. Silene uniflora ssp. petraea has the lowest between-population component of diversity in both seed shape (18-46%) and allozymes (0.8%) and shows no significant geographic structure in any of the character sets. Both Silene uniflora ssp. uniflora and Silene vulgaris show significant geographic differentiation in allozymes and seed morphology. The highest between-population component of diversity was found in Silene uniflora ssp. uniflora, where 17% of the total allozyme diversity and 39-82% of the seed shape diversity are accounted for by differences between populations.

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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Allozymes, Diversity, Elliptic Fourier coefficients, Geographic differentiation, Landmark characters, Seed shape
in
Canadian Journal of Botany
volume
75
issue
11
pages
1868 - 1886
publisher
Canadian Science Publishing, NRC Research Press
external identifiers
  • scopus:0031424726
ISSN
0008-4026
DOI
10.1139/b97-899
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Copyright: Copyright 2018 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
id
625de348-78ca-4b73-9ecb-b22f4384eed3
date added to LUP
2021-04-21 14:29:24
date last changed
2022-02-01 21:29:39
@article{625de348-78ca-4b73-9ecb-b22f4384eed3,
  abstract     = {{<p>Seed morphology (testa ornamentation and seed shape) and allozyme variation were investigated in three closely related and partially sympatric taxa of Silene in the Nordic region. Within this region, Silene vulgaris is a widespread weed of anthropogenic habitats. The two subspecies of Silene uniflora are restricted to naturally open habitats; ssp. uniflora has a coastal distribution, whereas the Swedish endemic, ssp. petraea, is restricted to limestone habitats on the islands of Oland and Gotland. All three taxa show a seed ornamentation polymorphism, with individuals producing either tubercled or smooth ('armadillo') seeds. Both seed morphology and allozymes show a separation between the two species Silene vulgaris and Silene uniflora and support the present taxonomic treatment of the endemic 'petraea' as a subspecies of Silene uniflora. Tubercled seeds predominate in Silene vulgaris and armadillo seeds predominate in Silene uniflora. However, there is considerable between-population variation in seed morph frequencies within taxa. In contrast to the other two taxa, populations of Silene uniflora ssp. petraea consistently show intermediate frequencies of both seed morphs. Silene uniflora ssp. petraea has the lowest between-population component of diversity in both seed shape (18-46%) and allozymes (0.8%) and shows no significant geographic structure in any of the character sets. Both Silene uniflora ssp. uniflora and Silene vulgaris show significant geographic differentiation in allozymes and seed morphology. The highest between-population component of diversity was found in Silene uniflora ssp. uniflora, where 17% of the total allozyme diversity and 39-82% of the seed shape diversity are accounted for by differences between populations.</p>}},
  author       = {{Runyeon, H. and Prentice, H. C.}},
  issn         = {{0008-4026}},
  keywords     = {{Allozymes; Diversity; Elliptic Fourier coefficients; Geographic differentiation; Landmark characters; Seed shape}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{11}},
  pages        = {{1868--1886}},
  publisher    = {{Canadian Science Publishing, NRC Research Press}},
  series       = {{Canadian Journal of Botany}},
  title        = {{Patterns of seed polymorphism and allozyme variation in the bladder campions, Silene vulgaris and silene uniflora (caryophyllaceae)}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/b97-899}},
  doi          = {{10.1139/b97-899}},
  volume       = {{75}},
  year         = {{1997}},
}