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Transcript
Stephanomeria
exigua
Parent Species
Stephanomeria malheurensis
Selfing Species
Asteraceae
Pink petals
Small Amounts
of nectar
Landing Platform
Mimulus lewisii (low to mid-elevation)
Bee pollinated
Red Petals
Large
amounts of
nectar
Reflexed petals,
no landing
platform
Mimulus cardinalis (mid to high elevation)
(Bird Pollinated)
F1 Hybrid
Cross between
Mimulus lewisii
and M. cardinalis
F2 generation
plants were
placed in a
grid in the
field and
scored for
pollinators.
•Yellow pigment
reduces visits by
bees.
•High nectar
volume increases
visits by birds.
How might shifts in
pollinators affect
speciation rates?
Two different pollinators
acting on one species
could result in
reproductive isolation
and speciation
YUP
yup
yup
YUP
Figure 1 Near-isogenic lines of
M. lewisii and M. cardinalis with
alternate alleles at the YUP
locus. a, b, M. lewisii; c, d, M.
cardinalis.The wild-type allele at
the YUP locus (a, c) has been
substituted by introgression with
the allele from the other species
(b, d). Flowers in each NIL pair
(a and b, c and d) are full
siblings.
Bradshaw and Schemske. 2003. Nature
426:176-178
The YUP gene controls
carotenoid (yellow
pigmentation).
YUP
yup
When it is
active/dominant it
suppresses yellow
pigment production.
When it is recessive it
allows yellow pigment
production.
yup
YUP
A single allele change can cause a shift
in pollinator types.
?
?
?
?
?
Back up systems in angiosperms may
predispose a species for further speciation
?
Lonicera canadensis
Caprifoliaceae
L. dioica
Early
Diervilla lonicera
Mid
Blooming Times
Late
Saxifraga virginiensis - early
Saxifraga tricuspidata - later
Saxifragaceae
Orchidaceae
Corallorhiza trifida
C. striata
C. maculata
Early
Mid
Late
Raphanobrassica, an allotetraploid, was first created by the Russian, G.
Karpenchenko in 1928. He crossed two species in the Brassicaceae,
Radish, Raphanus sativus (2N = 18) X Cabbage, Brassica oleracea (2N = 18)
Raphanobrassica has 2N = 36-- so it has a complete diploid set of chromosomes
from each parent. Karpenchenko had hoped to get the tops of the cabbage and
the bottoms of a radish. Unfortunately the result was the tops of the radish
(shown above) and the bottoms of the cabbage. It is cultivated in Scotland for
fodder for sheep and cattle.