Affiliation:
1. Masaryk University, Faculty of Science, Department of Botany and Zoology , Kotlarska 2, Brno , Czech Republic
2. Bolus Herbarium, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Town , Private Bag X3, Rondebosch, Cape Town 7701 , South Africa
Abstract
Abstract
Background and Aims
It is unclear how widespread polyploidy is throughout the largest holocentric plant family – the Cyperaceae. Because of the prevalence of chromosomal fusions and fissions, which affect chromosome number but not genome size, it can be impossible to distinguish if individual plants are polyploids in holocentric lineages based on chromosome count data alone. Furthermore, it is unclear how differences in genome size and ploidy levels relate to environmental correlates within holocentric lineages, such as the Cyperaceae.
Methods
We focus our analyses on tribe Schoeneae, and more specifically the southern African clade of Schoenus. We examine broad-scale patterns of genome size evolution in tribe Schoeneae and focus more intensely on determining the prevalence of polyploidy across the southern African Schoenus by inferring ploidy level with the program ChromEvol, as well as interpreting chromosome number and genome size data. We further investigate whether there are relationships between genome size/ploidy level and environmental variables across the nutrient-poor and summer-arid Cape biodiversity hotspot.
Key Results
Our results show a large increase in genome size, but not chromosome number, within Schoenus compared to other species in tribe Schoeneae. Across Schoenus, there is a positive relationship between chromosome number and genome size, and our results suggest that polyploidy is a relatively common process throughout the southern African Schoenus. At the regional scale of the Cape, we show that polyploids are more often associated with drier locations that have more variation in precipitation between dry and wet months, but these results are sensitive to the classification of ploidy level.
Conclusions
Polyploidy is relatively common in the southern African Schoenus, where a positive relationship is observed between chromosome number and genome size. Thus, there may be a high incidence of polyploidy in holocentric plants, whose cell division properties differ from monocentrics.
Funder
University of Cape Town
Smuts Memorial Botanical Fellowship
Fonds de recherche du Québec – Nature et technologies
International Association for Plant Taxonomy
Foundational Biodiversity Information Programme
South African National Research Foundation
Czech Science Foundation
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
10 articles.
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