Abstract

Rhinanthus minor and Rhinanthus angustifolius are known to hybridize in mixed populations in nature. These hybridization events can have important evolutionary consequences. The development and use of species-specific RAPD and ISSR markers allowed the detection of hybrid individuals not always distinguishable with morphological characters. Two mixed populations of different ages were studied. In a young mixed 2-year-old population, both individuals of the two parental species and F-1 hybrids were found using genetic analysis, showing that hybridization occurred rapidly. Flower morphology of F-1 hybrids was too variable to distinguish all these hybrids from the parental species. This morphological variability of F-1 hybrids was also confirmed in artificial crosses in the greenhouse. In an old and no longer mixed 30-year-old population, only R. angustifolius plants and a few genetically introgressed individuals close to R. angustifolius were present. Genetic markers showed traces of past hybridization and introgression. Unidirectional introgression of R. minor into R. angustifolius with the complete disappearance of R. minor from this population was observed.

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