The evolution of breeding systems and niches in Meconopsis Viguier (Papaveraceae) species from the eastern Tibetan region

Concerns have been raised about the viability of populations of Tibetan alpine forb species due to increased grazing, harvesting and climate change. This requires knowledge of the ecological niches and breeding systems of the species. I selected Meconopsis Viguier (Papaveraceae) as a representative...

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Main Author: Xie, Hongyan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: The Australian National University 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.25911/5d4eae089064f
https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/151296
id ftdatacite:10.25911/5d4eae089064f
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institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic QK495.P22 X54 2012
Meconopsis PhylogenyTibet Autonomous Region
Meconopsis ReproductionTibet Autonomous Region
Meconopsis EvolutionTibet Autonomous Region
spellingShingle QK495.P22 X54 2012
Meconopsis PhylogenyTibet Autonomous Region
Meconopsis ReproductionTibet Autonomous Region
Meconopsis EvolutionTibet Autonomous Region
Xie, Hongyan
The evolution of breeding systems and niches in Meconopsis Viguier (Papaveraceae) species from the eastern Tibetan region
topic_facet QK495.P22 X54 2012
Meconopsis PhylogenyTibet Autonomous Region
Meconopsis ReproductionTibet Autonomous Region
Meconopsis EvolutionTibet Autonomous Region
description Concerns have been raised about the viability of populations of Tibetan alpine forb species due to increased grazing, harvesting and climate change. This requires knowledge of the ecological niches and breeding systems of the species. I selected Meconopsis Viguier (Papaveraceae) as a representative iconic genus. To understand the evolution of divergent traits amongst species requires a phylogenetic tree. I generated trees using (i) DNA sequences of its and trnl genes and (ii) morphological and life history traits. The trees place Tibetan Meconopsis and Meconella (Arctic poppies) as sister clades, and these as sister clade with Papaver. The trees suggest polyploidy had a major role in the evolution of Meconopsis. Pollination trials in the field showed that species with 2n=56 chromosomes were self-incompatible (GSI) but some 2n=84 and 2n=76 species were partially or strongly self-compatible (SC). I suggest polyploidy disrupts the GSI mechanism but diploidisation can enable it to re-establish before mutation has degraded it too far. Thus, the evolution of different ploidy levels can lead to changes in breeding systems. Further, I distinguished two pollination syndromes in Meconopsis that also relate to ploidy: (i) GSI or SC flowers with open blue, violet or yellow petals that have a long style and are pollinated by Bombus and/or Dipteran. (ii) SC Flowers in which red or yellow petals enclose the stamens and stigma, and the style is short, that are pollinated by Diptera (2n=84 M. punicea and 2n=76 M. integrifolia var. integrifolia). Bombus were effective and frequent out-cross buzz-pollinators at lower altitudes but were scarce at high altitude. Diptera were frequent everywhere but caused much self-pollen transfer. I suggest that a polyploidy driven transition to SC allowed high altitude Meconopsis species or varieties to become dependent on Dipteran vectors and they co-evolved to attract and shelter certain Diptera. I also quantified the visual discrimination of petal colours by Bombus and Diptera, and found that red flowers are better discriminated by Diptera. I characterise ecological niches of 11 Meconopsis species. I recorded species abundance or absence and habitat factors at 6828 sites across the eastern Tibetan region. Suites of climate (degree-days and precipitation), substrate, vegetation, grazing (by livestock, pikas or marmots) and disturbance factors were significant predictors of abundance. Again, clades with different ploidy levels and breeding systems also showed ecological differentiation. The blue Aculeatae clade was most abundant in cold, well-drained stony sites with little competition. The violet Aculeatae clade was most abundant in wetter, grazing protected sites. The high-ploidy clades (2n=76, 84) were more common, more competitive - occurring amongst taller vegetation and on deeper soils, more tolerant of ungulate trampling, and occurred at sites with lower precipitation. I also assessed the impact of harvesting Meconopsis species for use in traditional medicine, which suggested that some species are experiencing local declines but others are not. By combining these results I suggest how different Meconopsis species respond to changes in grazing, harvesting and climate. The high ploidy SC species appear to have a greater ability to persist when rare. -- provided by Candidate.
format Thesis
author Xie, Hongyan
author_facet Xie, Hongyan
author_sort Xie, Hongyan
title The evolution of breeding systems and niches in Meconopsis Viguier (Papaveraceae) species from the eastern Tibetan region
title_short The evolution of breeding systems and niches in Meconopsis Viguier (Papaveraceae) species from the eastern Tibetan region
title_full The evolution of breeding systems and niches in Meconopsis Viguier (Papaveraceae) species from the eastern Tibetan region
title_fullStr The evolution of breeding systems and niches in Meconopsis Viguier (Papaveraceae) species from the eastern Tibetan region
title_full_unstemmed The evolution of breeding systems and niches in Meconopsis Viguier (Papaveraceae) species from the eastern Tibetan region
title_sort evolution of breeding systems and niches in meconopsis viguier (papaveraceae) species from the eastern tibetan region
publisher The Australian National University
publishDate 2018
url https://dx.doi.org/10.25911/5d4eae089064f
https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/151296
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
op_rights Author retains copyright
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25911/5d4eae089064f
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spelling ftdatacite:10.25911/5d4eae089064f 2023-05-15T15:19:58+02:00 The evolution of breeding systems and niches in Meconopsis Viguier (Papaveraceae) species from the eastern Tibetan region Xie, Hongyan 2018 https://dx.doi.org/10.25911/5d4eae089064f https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/151296 en eng The Australian National University Author retains copyright QK495.P22 X54 2012 Meconopsis PhylogenyTibet Autonomous Region Meconopsis ReproductionTibet Autonomous Region Meconopsis EvolutionTibet Autonomous Region Other CreativeWork article Thesis (PhD) 2018 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.25911/5d4eae089064f 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Concerns have been raised about the viability of populations of Tibetan alpine forb species due to increased grazing, harvesting and climate change. This requires knowledge of the ecological niches and breeding systems of the species. I selected Meconopsis Viguier (Papaveraceae) as a representative iconic genus. To understand the evolution of divergent traits amongst species requires a phylogenetic tree. I generated trees using (i) DNA sequences of its and trnl genes and (ii) morphological and life history traits. The trees place Tibetan Meconopsis and Meconella (Arctic poppies) as sister clades, and these as sister clade with Papaver. The trees suggest polyploidy had a major role in the evolution of Meconopsis. Pollination trials in the field showed that species with 2n=56 chromosomes were self-incompatible (GSI) but some 2n=84 and 2n=76 species were partially or strongly self-compatible (SC). I suggest polyploidy disrupts the GSI mechanism but diploidisation can enable it to re-establish before mutation has degraded it too far. Thus, the evolution of different ploidy levels can lead to changes in breeding systems. Further, I distinguished two pollination syndromes in Meconopsis that also relate to ploidy: (i) GSI or SC flowers with open blue, violet or yellow petals that have a long style and are pollinated by Bombus and/or Dipteran. (ii) SC Flowers in which red or yellow petals enclose the stamens and stigma, and the style is short, that are pollinated by Diptera (2n=84 M. punicea and 2n=76 M. integrifolia var. integrifolia). Bombus were effective and frequent out-cross buzz-pollinators at lower altitudes but were scarce at high altitude. Diptera were frequent everywhere but caused much self-pollen transfer. I suggest that a polyploidy driven transition to SC allowed high altitude Meconopsis species or varieties to become dependent on Dipteran vectors and they co-evolved to attract and shelter certain Diptera. I also quantified the visual discrimination of petal colours by Bombus and Diptera, and found that red flowers are better discriminated by Diptera. I characterise ecological niches of 11 Meconopsis species. I recorded species abundance or absence and habitat factors at 6828 sites across the eastern Tibetan region. Suites of climate (degree-days and precipitation), substrate, vegetation, grazing (by livestock, pikas or marmots) and disturbance factors were significant predictors of abundance. Again, clades with different ploidy levels and breeding systems also showed ecological differentiation. The blue Aculeatae clade was most abundant in cold, well-drained stony sites with little competition. The violet Aculeatae clade was most abundant in wetter, grazing protected sites. The high-ploidy clades (2n=76, 84) were more common, more competitive - occurring amongst taller vegetation and on deeper soils, more tolerant of ungulate trampling, and occurred at sites with lower precipitation. I also assessed the impact of harvesting Meconopsis species for use in traditional medicine, which suggested that some species are experiencing local declines but others are not. By combining these results I suggest how different Meconopsis species respond to changes in grazing, harvesting and climate. The high ploidy SC species appear to have a greater ability to persist when rare. -- provided by Candidate. Thesis Arctic Climate change DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic