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Genetic diversity and hybrid formation in Central European club-mosses (Diphasiastrum, Lycopodiaceae) - new insights from cp microsatellites, two nuclear markers and AFLP.

In Europe, the genus Diphasiastrum (Lycopodiophyta) forms a reticulate network of six diploid taxa, including three parent species (D. alpinum, D. complanatum and D. tristachyum) and three hybrids (D. × issleri, D. × oellgaardii and D. × zeilleri). It was not clear if the hybrids arose once or repeatedly, if they have reproductive competence and if backcrossing occurs. We addressed these questions by analysing 209 accessions for chloroplast microsatellites (cp), two nuclear markers (introns of the RPB and LFY genes) and AFLP. For D. complanatum we show a sexual life cycle with alternation of generations: the gametophytic DNA amount is half of that of the sporophyte. With the exception of a single accession all hybrids display one of the two parental cp haplotypes; their frequencies do not differ significantly from a 1 : 1 ratio. Genotypes of nuclear markers are species-specific, displaying 2/4/1 (RPB) and 1/8/1 alleles (LFY) for the three parents mentioned above; all hybrids have one allele from each parent. All three hybrid taxa apparently represent independent F1 crosses. Hybridisation occurs bidirectional; no evidence for recent backcrossing was found. Asexual reproduction via agamospory is at least rare, since AFLP showed all hybrid plants to be different.

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