Abstract

Leaf and shoot characteristics of the following four European barberry taxa from the Balkan Peninsula and Sicily were investigated in the present study: Berberis croatica, B. vulgaris, B. aetnensis and B. cretica. Analyses were based on 10 populations of B. croatica, five of B. vulgaris and two populations of both B. aetnensis and B. cretica. Populations were randomly selected within the natural distribution area of these species. Eight leaf traits, three shoot traits and the blade length/width ratio were analysed. Multivariate analysis (principal component analysis, canonical discriminant analysis and cluster analysis) distinguished B. cretica and B. aetnensis populations and, to a lesser extent, the populations of B. croatica and B. vulgaris. ANOVA showed that the analysed populations of both B. aetnensis and B. cretica were homogeneous within the species. All populations of both B. croatica and B. vulgaris showed different degrees of intraspecies variability. Lack of complete separation, the observed grouping of populations and high intraspecies variability in B. vulgaris and B. croatica may reflect the fact that the sampled B vulgaris and B.croatica populations were located at environmentally variable sites (unlike B. aetnensis and B. cretica), resulting in high phenotypic plasticity in those populations. Even though the observed patterns of morphological variation support the idea of four barberry taxa on the Balkan Peninsula and in Sicily, because of suspected adaptive phenotypic plasticity of the analysed Berberis taxa, the true taxonomic status of these taxa needs to be additionally confirmed by molecular methods.

Highlights

  • The genus Berberis L. includes about 500 species native to Asia, North Africa, America and Europe (Ahrendt 1961)

  • The population from Greece that was reported as B. vulgaris in the literature was treated as B. croatica (Bc_Gr), and the population from Bosnia and Herzegovina that was reported to be B. croatica in the literature was treated as B. vulgaris (Bv_Os; Table 1)

  • From descriptive statistics of the analysed traits (Supplementary Material 1), it can be seen that B. cretica differed from the other taxa in having the smallest and narrowest leaves with almost no teeth

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Summary

Introduction

The genus Berberis L. includes about 500 species native to Asia, North Africa, America and Europe (Ahrendt 1961). Later Webb (1964) recognised four European barberry species: B. vulgaris L., B. aetnensis C. In contrast, recognised B. croatica as a subspecies of B. vulgaris (Anić 1946) or B. aetnensis (Anić 1946; Forenbacher 1990). Akeroyd & Webb (1993) included only B. vulgaris and B. cretica as European barberry species, while considering B. aetnensis and B. hispanica as subspecies of B. vulgaris. On the other hand, was not even listed as a European barberry species by Akeroyd & Webb (1993), while a database like IPNI (2020) does not list it and the Euro+Med (2006) database lists it as a synonym for B. vulgaris

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