National Repository of Grey Literature 3 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Risk assessment of interspecific hybridization between endemic Campanula bohemica and widespread C. rotundifolia s.l.
Hanušová, Kateřina ; Suda, Jan (advisor) ; Krahulec, František (referee)
The thesis deals with phenotypic, ploidy and genetic variation of two Campanula species occurring in the Krkonoše Mts., namely the endemic C. bohemica and widespread C. rotundifolia subsp. rotundifolia. For comparative purposes subspecies sudetica of the latter species was also included. The main aim was to get insight into population structure and assess the threat of interspecific hybridization to the survival of the endemic bluebell. Flow cytometry, distance-based morphometrics and molecular analysis were used to address these questions. Three distinct groups of fluorescence intensities were revealed by flow cytometry, corresponding to DNA diploids, tetraploids and pentaploids. While diploids morphologically matched the nominate subspecies of C. rotundifolia, tetraploids corresponded either to C. rotundifolia subsp. sudetica or C. bohemica. Most populations from the Krkonoše Mts. were uniform although a sympatric growth of diploids and tetraploids was encountered in 12 populations. Only two pentaploids individuals, most likely of hybrid origin, were found, which indicated that interspecific hybridization is much less common than previously assumed. The two tetraploid taxa were distinguished by molecular markers. A combination of flow cytometry and molecular analyses thus allowed reliable...
Risk assessment of interspecific hybridization between endemic Campanula bohemica and widespread C. rotundifolia s.l.
Hanušová, Kateřina ; Suda, Jan (advisor) ; Krahulec, František (referee)
The thesis deals with phenotypic, ploidy and genetic variation of two Campanula species occurring in the Krkonoše Mts., namely the endemic C. bohemica and widespread C. rotundifolia subsp. rotundifolia. For comparative purposes subspecies sudetica of the latter species was also included. The main aim was to get insight into population structure and assess the threat of interspecific hybridization to the survival of the endemic bluebell. Flow cytometry, distance-based morphometrics and molecular analysis were used to address these questions. Three distinct groups of fluorescence intensities were revealed by flow cytometry, corresponding to DNA diploids, tetraploids and pentaploids. While diploids morphologically matched the nominate subspecies of C. rotundifolia, tetraploids corresponded either to C. rotundifolia subsp. sudetica or C. bohemica. Most populations from the Krkonoše Mts. were uniform although a sympatric growth of diploids and tetraploids was encountered in 12 populations. Only two pentaploids individuals, most likely of hybrid origin, were found, which indicated that interspecific hybridization is much less common than previously assumed. The two tetraploid taxa were distinguished by molecular markers. A combination of flow cytometry and molecular analyses thus allowed reliable...
Microevolutionary processes in the Czech endemic Campanula bohemica
Hanušová, Kateřina ; Suda, Jan (advisor) ; Vít, Petr (referee)
The genus Campanula L. - bellflower - is the largest group of the family Campanulaceae with a subcosmopolitan distribution and poorly resolved infrageneric classification. The evolutionary history of the genus has been shaped by a number of microevolutionary processes, including interspecific hybridization, genome duplication and geographical isolation, that resulted in the genesis of several endemic or geographically restricted species. The centre of endemism in the Czech Republic lies in subalpine altitudes of the Jeseníky and the Krkonoše (Giant) mountains, where three endemic taxa can be found: C. gelida Kovanda, C. rotundifolia L. subsp. sudetica (Hruby) Soó and C. bohemica Hruby. Despite their evolutionary and biogeographical value, there is a lack of information about their phenotypic variation, population structure, evolutionary history and processes acting in their populations. A critical assessment of these topics would require application of modern biosystematics tools. Campanula bohemica is an endangered neoendemics of higher altitudes in the Krkonoše Mts., closely related to C. scheuchzeri Vill., native to the Alps. The endemic species often grows in sympatry with related and morphologically similar C. rotundifolia. The incidence of intermediate morphotypes suggest that both species can...

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