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Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species Stephanomeria malheurensis Selfing Species Asteraceae
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Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

Dec 30, 2015

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Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species. Stephanomeria malheurensis Selfing Species. Asteraceae. Pink petals. Small Amounts of nectar. Landing Platform. Mimulus lewisii (low to mid-elevation) Bee pollinated. Red Petals. Large amounts of nectar. Reflexed petals, no landing platform. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

Stephanomeria exigua

Parent SpeciesStephanomeria malheurensis

Selfing Species

Asteraceae

Page 2: Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

Mimulus lewisii (low to mid-elevation)

Bee pollinated

Pink petals

Landing Platform

Small Amounts of nectar

Page 3: Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

Mimulus cardinalis (mid to high elevation)

(Bird Pollinated)

Reflexed petals, no landing platform

Large amounts of nectar

Red Petals

Page 4: Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

F1 Hybrid

Cross between Mimulus lewisii and M. cardinalis

Page 5: Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

F2 generation plants were placed in a grid in the field and scored for pollinators.

•Yellow pigment reduces visits by bees.

•High nectar volume increases

visits by birds.

How might shifts in pollinators affect speciation rates?

Page 6: Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

Two different pollinators acting on one species could result in reproductive isolation and speciation

Page 7: Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

Figure 1 Near-isogenic lines of M. lewisii and M. cardinalis with alternate alleles at the YUP locus. a, b, M. lewisii; c, d, M. cardinalis.The wild-type allele at the YUP locus (a, c) has been substituted by introgression with the allele from the other species (b, d). Flowers in each NIL pair (a and b, c and d) are full siblings.

YUP yup

yup YUPBradshaw and Schemske. 2003. Nature 426:176-178

Page 8: Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

YUP yup

yup YUP

The YUP gene controls carotenoid (yellow pigmentation).

When it is active/dominant it suppresses yellow pigment production.

When it is recessive it allows yellow pigment production.

Page 9: Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

A single allele change can cause a shift in pollinator types.

Page 10: Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

? ? ? ?

Back up systems in angiosperms may predispose a species for further speciation

? ?

Page 11: Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

Early

Mid

Late

Lonicera canadensis

L. dioica

Diervilla lonicera

Blooming Times

Caprifoliaceae

Page 12: Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

Saxifraga virginiensis - early Saxifraga tricuspidata - later

Saxifragaceae

Page 13: Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

Corallorhiza trifida C. striata C. maculata

Early Mid Late

Orchidaceae

Page 14: Stephanomeria exigua Parent Species

Raphanobrassica, an allotetraploid, was first created by the Russian, G. Karpenchenko in 1928. He crossed two species in the Brassicaceae, Radish, Raphanus sativus (2N = 18) X Cabbage, Brassica oleracea (2N = 18)

Raphanobrassica has 2N = 36-- so it has a complete diploid set of chromosomes from each parent. Karpenchenko had hoped to get the tops of the cabbage and the bottoms of a radish. Unfortunately the result was the tops of the radish (shown above) and the bottoms of the cabbage. It is cultivated in Scotland for fodder for sheep and cattle.