Evolution and conservation of tetraploid Euphrasia L. in Britain
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Authors
Stone, Harriet
Abstract
In the UK, nearly half of the plants short listed for high conservation priority in the UK
Biodiversity Action Plan are found in taxonomically complex groups. It is thought that a shift
from species- to process-based conservation strategies, aimed at conserving the processes that
generate diversity as opposed to simply the end product of these dynamic interactions, may
benefit these groups. One group for which this strategy has been proposed is tetraploid
Euphrasia. The underlying taxonomic complexity in this group is hypothesised to arise via
breeding systems, hybridisation and local ecotypic adaptation. The goal of this thesis is to use
morphological, ecological and molecular marker data to examine taxon limits and evolutionary
processes in order to further understand the mechanisms involved in maintaining species
boundaries and generating taxonomic complexity in tetraploid Euphrasia. This will not only
make conservation in this group more effective, but will also provide a broader insight into some
of the processes involved in plant speciation. A detailed study of two widespread, small flowered,
tetraploid taxa, E. micrantha and E. scottica, showed that offspring are almost exclusively the
result of self-fertilization. These taxa maintain distinctive morphologies, habitat preferences and
chloroplast DNA variation throughout their range, suggesting that they represent coherent
lineages within Scotland. As in other widespread inbreeding species, there are high levels of
microsatellite differentiation among different populations of the same species. In northwest
Scotland three complex populations of tetraploid Euphrasia were identified which comprised an
array of many different morphs (recognised species, and putative hybrids). Analysis of
chloroplast and microsatellite markers suggests that these different morphs represent distinct
genetic groups. Within each site there is evidence both for habitat heterogeneity, and for
association of morphs with this habitat variation. Intermediate morphs were not simple F1
hybrids, but are likely to have originated via hybridisation and subsequent selfing, surviving as
independent recombinant lines, perhaps specialised for habitat types different from that of their
progenitor parents. These stable morphs of hybrid origin could represent groups with adaptive
potential that may result in the origin of a novel Euphrasia species. It will be important to further
examine the processes involved in generating novel diversity in Euphrasia. For the time being,
these complex populations must be recognised as sites requiring special protection within the
context of a process-based conservation strategy.
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