Abstract

Analysis of 368 plants derived from 239 natural populations showed that this taxonomically perplexing and wide-ranging species-complex consists of diploids (n = 8), tetraploids, hexaploids and octoploids. Microsporocytes were the source of most of the chromosome counts. Meiosis was basically regular. Multivalent formation was uncommon, but 11 % of all the plants examined had one or more full-sized extra chromosomes. The frequency of plants with extra chromosomes varied significantly among the taxa, from 0 (five varieties) to over 20 % (two varieties). Except in one instance, where one population yielded a diploid and a triploid, different ploidy levels were not found in the same population. The frequency of diploid, tetraploid, hexaploid and octoploid populations was, respectively, 71, 22, 4 and 2%. Variety obovatum appears to be exclusively diploid, and var. aphanactis exclusively tetraploid. Diploids and one or more polyploid levels occurred in the other taxa. No correlation was found between polyploidy and geological history, soils, topography or climate, nor were the polyploids more widely distributed than the diploids. Some of the polyploid populations seem to have been derived from inter-varietal hybridizations, but others do not. The complex has a “pillar” structure in which 10 diploid taxa support a three-level polyploid superstructure. The available evidence suggests that the major role of polyploidy here has been to stabilize the products of intra- and inter-varietal hybridizations.

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