Geographical parthenogenesis: evolutionary and ecological significance of apomictic reproduction in vascular plants

It has been suggested that polyploidization affects the ecological niche of a species, possibly ultimately leading to a shift in the distribution of the species, such as in geographical parthenogenesis. The phenomenon describes the wider distribution and shift of asexuals towards higher altitudes, n...

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Main Author: Hartmann, Matthias
Other Authors: Mráz, Patrik, Dobeš, Christoph, Krahulec, František
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Univerzita Karlova, Přírodovědecká fakulta 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/102898
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spelling ftunivpraha:oai:https://dspace.cuni.cz:20.500.11956/102898 2023-08-20T04:04:57+02:00 Geographical parthenogenesis: evolutionary and ecological significance of apomictic reproduction in vascular plants Geografická parthenogeneze: evoluční a ekologický význam apomiktického rozmnožování u cévnatých rostlin Hartmann, Matthias Mráz, Patrik Dobeš, Christoph Krahulec, František 2018 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/102898 English en_US eng Univerzita Karlova, Přírodovědecká fakulta http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/102898 155762 002205558 asexual reproduction Baker rule colonization distributional success plasticity vascular plants dizertační práce 2018 ftunivpraha https://doi.org/20.500.11956/102898 2023-08-01T20:32:02Z It has been suggested that polyploidization affects the ecological niche of a species, possibly ultimately leading to a shift in the distribution of the species, such as in geographical parthenogenesis. The phenomenon describes the wider distribution and shift of asexuals towards higher altitudes, northern latitudes and more extreme habitats when compared with their closely related sexual relatives. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain such patterns with lacking empirical evidence because investigations rather focused on single hypotheses, which were rather tested several times independently on multiple organisms than vice versa. Therefore, the present study aimed to tackle the phenomenon of geographical parthenogenesis from multiple angles, i.e. testing several hypotheses simultaneously using Hieracium alpinum as a model system. In the arcto-alpine Asteraceae H. alpinum sexually reproducing diploid individuals occur in a small isolated area in the Eastern and Southern Carpathians, while apomictically reproducing, i.e. asexual reproduction via seeds, triploid plants occupy the remaining and much larger part of the range from the Balkans to the arctic parts of Europe. This implies that asexual triploids have had some fitness / colonization advantage(s), leading to a replacement of sexual diploids. It has been suggested that polyploidization affects the ecological niche of a species, possibly ultimately leading to a shift in the distribution of the species, such as in geographical parthenogenesis. The phenomenon describes the wider distribution and shift of asexuals towards higher altitudes, northern latitudes and more extreme habitats when compared with their closely related sexual relatives. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain such patterns with lacking empirical evidence because investigations rather focused on single hypotheses, which were rather tested several times independently on multiple organisms than vice versa. Therefore, the present study aimed to tackle the phenomenon of ... Thesis Arctic Charles University CU Digital repository Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Charles University CU Digital repository
op_collection_id ftunivpraha
language English
topic asexual reproduction
Baker rule
colonization
distributional success
plasticity
vascular plants
spellingShingle asexual reproduction
Baker rule
colonization
distributional success
plasticity
vascular plants
Hartmann, Matthias
Geographical parthenogenesis: evolutionary and ecological significance of apomictic reproduction in vascular plants
topic_facet asexual reproduction
Baker rule
colonization
distributional success
plasticity
vascular plants
description It has been suggested that polyploidization affects the ecological niche of a species, possibly ultimately leading to a shift in the distribution of the species, such as in geographical parthenogenesis. The phenomenon describes the wider distribution and shift of asexuals towards higher altitudes, northern latitudes and more extreme habitats when compared with their closely related sexual relatives. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain such patterns with lacking empirical evidence because investigations rather focused on single hypotheses, which were rather tested several times independently on multiple organisms than vice versa. Therefore, the present study aimed to tackle the phenomenon of geographical parthenogenesis from multiple angles, i.e. testing several hypotheses simultaneously using Hieracium alpinum as a model system. In the arcto-alpine Asteraceae H. alpinum sexually reproducing diploid individuals occur in a small isolated area in the Eastern and Southern Carpathians, while apomictically reproducing, i.e. asexual reproduction via seeds, triploid plants occupy the remaining and much larger part of the range from the Balkans to the arctic parts of Europe. This implies that asexual triploids have had some fitness / colonization advantage(s), leading to a replacement of sexual diploids. It has been suggested that polyploidization affects the ecological niche of a species, possibly ultimately leading to a shift in the distribution of the species, such as in geographical parthenogenesis. The phenomenon describes the wider distribution and shift of asexuals towards higher altitudes, northern latitudes and more extreme habitats when compared with their closely related sexual relatives. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain such patterns with lacking empirical evidence because investigations rather focused on single hypotheses, which were rather tested several times independently on multiple organisms than vice versa. Therefore, the present study aimed to tackle the phenomenon of ...
author2 Mráz, Patrik
Dobeš, Christoph
Krahulec, František
format Thesis
author Hartmann, Matthias
author_facet Hartmann, Matthias
author_sort Hartmann, Matthias
title Geographical parthenogenesis: evolutionary and ecological significance of apomictic reproduction in vascular plants
title_short Geographical parthenogenesis: evolutionary and ecological significance of apomictic reproduction in vascular plants
title_full Geographical parthenogenesis: evolutionary and ecological significance of apomictic reproduction in vascular plants
title_fullStr Geographical parthenogenesis: evolutionary and ecological significance of apomictic reproduction in vascular plants
title_full_unstemmed Geographical parthenogenesis: evolutionary and ecological significance of apomictic reproduction in vascular plants
title_sort geographical parthenogenesis: evolutionary and ecological significance of apomictic reproduction in vascular plants
publisher Univerzita Karlova, Přírodovědecká fakulta
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/102898
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/102898
155762
002205558
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.11956/102898
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