Abstract
We have reviewed past and recent research on the radiation of the North American genus Boechera (Brassicaceae), and discuss future prospects for our understanding of the evolutionary processes and patterns of differentiation in this highly polymorphic genus. Boechera comprises about 80 biennial to perennial species of exclusively North American and Greenlandic distribution. Hybridization and apomixis, in conjunction with polyploidy, were found to play a major role in the origin and maintenance of intraspecific and interspecific polymorphism. However, taxonomic classification within the genus has mainly been based on morphological characters, and diagnostic features discriminating between taxa are often limited. Molecular markers are promising tools for: the assessment of infrageneric phylogen‐etic relationships, the isolation of basal sexual taxa, the detection of hybridization and estimation of its frequency among lineages in time and space, the identification of centres of genetic and species diversity, and the comparison of various reproductive modes. We present and discuss the major achievements obtained since the introduction of molecular methods to Boechera research with respect to these aims, and point out possible shortcomings of specific marker systems. The distribution and transmission of apomixis, polyphyletic origin of genotypes and cytotypes, variation in reproductive system, and the lack of consensus between current taxonomic concepts and evolutionary evidence are the major topics discussed here in the context of hybridization.
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