Diploids and tetraploids of Acorus (Acoraceae) in temperate Asia are pseudocryptic species with clear differences in micromorphology, DNA sequences and distribution patterns, but shared pollination biology

Author:

Sokoloff Dmitry D.1ORCID,Degtjareva Galina V.1ORCID,Skaptsov Mikhail V.2ORCID,Vislobokov Nikolay A.1ORCID,Kirejtshuk Alexander G.3ORCID,Sennikov Alexander N.4ORCID,Severova Elena E.1ORCID,Chepinoga Victor V.56ORCID,Samigullin Tahir H.7ORCID,Valiejo‐Roman Carmen M.7ORCID,Smirnov Sergey V.2ORCID,Shmakov Alexander I.2ORCID,Marchuk Elena A.8ORCID,Remizowa Margarita V.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biological Faculty M.V. Lomonosov Moscow State University Moscow Russian Federation

2. South‐Siberian Botanical Garden Altai State University Barnaul Russian Federation

3. Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences St Petersburg Russian Federation

4. Botanical Museum, Finnish Museum of Natural History University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

5. Institute of Geobotany Leibniz University Hannover Hannover Germany

6. Faculty of Biology and Soil Sciences Irkutsk State University Irkutsk Russian Federation

7. A.N. Belozersky Institute of Physico‐Chemical Biology Lomonosov Moscow State University Moscow Russian Federation

8. Botanical Garden‐Institute FEB RAS Vladivostok Russian Federation

Abstract

AbstractCommonly considered bispecific, Acorus is one of the most phylogenetically isolated angiosperm genera that forms the order Acorales sister to the rest of the monocots. The Acorus calamus group is widely distributed in the Holarctic regions of Eurasia and America and has strong medicinal and other practical uses since prehistoric times. Earlier studies interpreted native diploids and invasive triploids occurring in North America as two species that differed in morphology and distribution ranges. In contrast, diploids, triploids, and tetraploids occurring in Eurasia are commonly interpreted as one species because they reportedly cannot be distinguished in collections. We resolve the controversy over taxonomic concepts between Eurasia and America and provide the first detailed multidisciplinary account of Acorus in temperate Asia. We used plastid and nuclear markers, leaf anatomy, seed micromorphology, pollen stainability, flow cytometry, and direct chromosome counts. Diploids and tetraploids show stable molecular and micromorphological differences. Triploids are their sterile hybrids, with the plastid genome inherited from the diploid parent. Diploids of America and Asia tend to differ in leaf characters. Coadaptative coexistence with pollinating beetles Platamartus jakowlewi and Sibirhelus corpulentus (Kateretidae) is conserved between diploids and tetraploids and over a distance of 4700 km between Japan and Western Siberia. Diploids are self‐compatible and can set seeds in the absence of kateretid beetles. Tetraploids are self‐incompatible and/or cannot set seeds in the absence of Platamartus and Sibirhelus. Diploids (A. americanus) and tetraploids (A. verus) are two biological species; the former has two subspecies. Acorus calamus should be restricted to triploids; it apparently first evolved in temperate Asia. Diploids mostly occur in much cooler climates than triploids and tetraploids. Accessions of A. verus and A. calamus from tropical Asia are apparently derived from ancient introductions. Our data provide a new framework for the pharmacological use of Acorus.

Publisher

Wiley

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