Abstract
Anthoxanthum alpinum Love & Love has been described as a diploid perennial distributed in northern Eurasia and the high mountains of central and eastern Europe. Difficulties in finding reliable morphological differences between this taxon and the widespread tetraploid Anthoxanthum odoratum L. have resulted in taxonomists treating them as conspecific, despite the cytological differentiation. The purpose of this study was to use different approaches to assess the relationships between close congeners, such as the pair A. odoratum/A. alpinum. Macromorphological, micromorphological, and molecular data were gathered and analysed for 14 populations representing both taxa from Scandinavia and the Iberian Peninsula. Different cluster analyses were performed to study the relatedness between individuals and populations. Subsequently, a principal components analysis was computed on the basis of macromorphological quantitative traits, and principal coordinates analysis was used to analyse qualitative, micromorphological, and random amplification of polymorphic DNA (RAPD) data. An analysis of molecular variance was applied to the molecular data, and the genetic differentiation between samples was measured using the FST estimator. The results showed that the geographical origin was more important than the ploidy level in explaining the relatedness between specimens and populations. Moreover, a strong correlation was found between the micromorphological traits and environmental parameters. The results of the analyses do not support the assignment of a specific taxonomic rank to A. alpinum. © 2008 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2008, 156, 237–252.
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