Origin, genetic structure and evolutionary potential of the natural hybrid Ranunculus circinatus × R. fluitans

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Abstract

Understanding the genetic variability of hybrids provides information on their current and future evolutionary role. In this paper, we focus on the interspecific hybrid Ranunculus circinatus × R. fluitans that forms spontaneously within the group Ranuculus L. sect. Batrachium DC. (Ranunculaceae Juss.). Genome-wide DNA fingerprinting using amplified fragment length polymorphisms (AFLP) was employed to determine the genetic variation among 36 riverine populations of the hybrid and their parental species. The results demonstrate a strong genetic structure of R. circinatus × R. fluitans within Poland (Central Europe), which is attributed to independent hybridization events, sterility of hybrid individuals, vegetative propagation, and isolation through geographical distance within populations. The hybrid R. circinatus × R. fluitans is a sterile triploid, but, as we have shown in this study, it may participate in subsequent hybridization events, resulting in a ploidy change that can lead to spontaneous fertility recovery. The ability to produce unreduced female gametes of the hybrid R. circinatus × R. fluitans and the parental species R. fluitans is an important evolutionary mechanism in Ranunculus sect. Batrachium that could give rise to new taxa.

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Zalewska-Gałosz, J., Kwiatkowska, M., Prančl, J., Skubała, K., Lučanová, M., Gebler, D., & Szoszkiewicz, K. (2023). Origin, genetic structure and evolutionary potential of the natural hybrid Ranunculus circinatus × R. fluitans. Scientific Reports, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-36253-7

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