Systematic inferences from variation in isozyme profiles of arctic and alpine cespitose Festuca (Poaceae)
1993
Aiken, S.G. | Consaul, L.L. | Davis, J.I. | Manos, P.S.
Variation in isozyme patterns was used to assess species boundaries in North American arctic and alpine representatives of the Festuca ovina L. complex. Isozyme profiles, in combination with chromosome number, delimit four discrete entities within the complex: F. bretissima Jurtzev (diploid); F. aggr. auriculata Drobov (diploid); F. brachyphylla Schultes (hexaploid); and tetraploid populations corresponding in morphology to F. baffinensis Polunin (arctic Canada) and F. minutiflora Rydberg (alpine United States). Although no fixed difference was detected between isozyme profiles of the latter two taxa, they are morphologically distinct. Thus variation in isozymes, morphology, and chromosome number delimits five taxa within the F. ovina complex in North America. Some alleles observed in the polyploid taxa were not detected among the diploids, and some observed in F. brachyphylla, the hexaploid taxon, were not detected in either the diploid or the tetraploid species. One possible explanation for these occurrences is that the North American polyploids originated in Eurasia, where many other potential diploid and tetraploid progenitors occur.
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