Abstract

A southern Spanish massif (Tejeda/Almijara range, Malaga province, SE Spain) has been previously identified as a contact zone for genotypes of a rare taxon,Armeria villosa subsp.bernisii, and a frequent one,A. filicaulis, based on (1) the discovery of a species-independent geographically structured pattern of variation for nuclear ribosomal ITS sequence data, and (2) the sharing of chloroplast haplotypes, which reveal horizontal transfer between the species. This study uses RAPD data, as a total DNA marker, and morphometrics, as potentially revealing hybridization and introgression, to throw further light on the origin of the above mentioned contact zone. Individuals of the two taxa sampled from the range do not show a F1 hybrid profile for RAPD or for morphometrics. To integrate these results with the previously published sequence data (ITS and chloroplast spacertrnL-F) it is proposed that introgressive hybridization has occurred inA. villosa subsp.bernisii, whereas forA. filicaulis the contact zone occurs at the intraspecific level. With the available data, the contact between individuals ofArmeria with different genotypes in the two taxa may have implied westward migration from a biodiverse massif like Sierra Nevada, and this may apply to other organisms although further data are needed to confirm it.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call