What is Suksdorf’s hawthorn? Revision of the Western North American 20-stamen black-fruited hawthorns (Crataegus series Douglasianae, Rosaceae subtribe Malinae)

Q4 Agricultural and Biological Sciences Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas Pub Date : 2023-07-21 DOI:10.17348/jbrit.v17.i1.1292
T. Dickinson, Shery Han
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Abstract

An agamic complex of 20- and 10-stamen, black-fruited hawthorns (Crataegus subg. Sanguineae, sect. Douglasianae) occurs in western North America, with a 10-stamen taxon disjunct in the upper Great Lakes basin. Here, we recircumscribe the 20-stamen taxa at the core of this complex (C. ser. Douglasianae). This is needed in order to distinguish between a presumptively ancestral diploid and its allo- and autopolyploid derivatives, all differing in breeding system, distribution, morphology, and pattern of genetic variation. The earliest name for these 20-stamen taxa, Crataegus gaylussacia A. Heller, was given to distinctive plants of Marin and Sonoma counties in California that have recently been shown to be autotriploids. In Flora North America, however, this name was applied to all 20-stamen, black-fruited hawthorns. We recircumscribe C. gaylussacia, and also recircumscribe and typify a slightly younger name, C. suksdorfii (Sarg.) Kruschke, with a specimen from southern Washington with the diminished pollen fertility found in allopolyploid, apomictic black-fruited hawthorns occurring east of the Cascades, from northern California north to southernmost Alaska. Finally, we recognize the diploid, self-incompatible, sexual black-fruited hawthorns found west of the Cascades from northern California to southwestern Washington as Crataegus rhodamae-loveae sp. nov. Together with the 10-stamen, black-fruited hawthorns in predominantly tetraploid, apomictic, and self-fertile C. douglasii Lindl. and its segregates (discussed in detail in a companion paper), these species are linked by whole genome duplications associated in most cases with hybridization, with members of red-fruited C. subg. Americanae, and with each other. We suggest that this complex provides a model for understanding other such groups of Crataegus species that are related by whole genome duplications resulting from the fertilization of unreduced gametes (facilitated by but not necessarily dependent on occurrence of gametophytic apomixis), often together with hybridization. We note that an earlier effort at DNA barcoding these and other hawthorn species that provided limited support for our taxonomic decisions here also demonstrated some limited utility of the original plant DNA barcoding loci in groups like Crataegus. The taxonomic decisions we advocate will warrant consideration when other groups of hawthorns are revised in the light of data like those employed here.
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苏克斯多夫山楂是什么?北美西部20雄蕊黑果山楂(山楂科,蔷薇科,黑果山楂亚族)的修正
黑果山楂是一种由20和10个雄蕊、黑果山楂(Crataegus subg.Sanguineeae,sect.Douglasiane)组成的无盖菌复合体,产于北美洲西部,在五大湖盆地上游有一个10个雄蕊的分离分类单元。在这里,我们在这个复合体(C.ser.DDouglasiane)的核心重新划分了20个雄蕊分类群。这是区分假定的祖先二倍体及其异倍体和同源多倍体衍生物所必需的,它们在育种系统、分布、形态和遗传变异模式方面都有所不同。这20个雄蕊分类群的最早名称为Crataegus gaylussacia A.Heller,是指加利福尼亚州马林县和索诺马县的独特植物,这些植物最近被证明是同源三倍体。然而,在《北美植物志》中,这个名字适用于所有20个雄蕊、黑色果实的山楂。我们重新记录了C.gaylussacia,也重新记录并代表了一个稍年轻的名字,C.suksdorfii(Sarg.)Kruschke,以及一个来自华盛顿南部的花粉育性降低的标本,该标本出现在卡斯卡德山脉以东,从加利福尼亚州北部到阿拉斯加最南部的异源多倍体、无融合体黑果山楂中。最后,我们将在从加利福尼亚州北部到华盛顿西南部的卡斯卡德山脉以西发现的二倍体、自交不亲和、有性黑果山楂称为Crataegus rhodamae loveae sp.nov.。与10个雄蕊一起,黑果山楂主要为四倍体、无融合生殖和自能育的C.douglasii Lindl。和它的分离(在一篇配套论文中详细讨论),这些物种通过全基因组复制连接,在大多数情况下与杂交有关,与红果C.亚属的成员。美国人,彼此之间。我们认为,这种复合体为理解其他这类山楂属物种提供了一个模型,这些物种与未还原配子受精产生的全基因组复制有关(由配子体无融合生殖的发生促进,但不一定依赖于此),通常与杂交一起。我们注意到,早期对这些和其他山楂物种进行DNA条形码编码的努力,为我们的分类决策提供了有限的支持,也证明了原始植物DNA条形码基因座在山楂等群体中的有限效用。当根据这里使用的数据对其他种类的山楂进行修订时,我们主张的分类学决定将值得考虑。
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来源期刊
Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas
Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Plant Science
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: The Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas, formerly called Sida, Contributions to Botany, publishes research in classical and modern systematic botany—including studies of anatomy, biogeography, chemotaxonomy, ecology, evolution, floristics, genetics, paleobotany, palynology, and phylogenetic systematics. Geographic coverage is global. Articles are published in either English or Spanish; an abstract is provided in both languages. All contributions are peer reviewed and frequently illustrated with maps, line drawings, and full color photographs.
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