Litcius/Paper detail

Novel Approaches for Species Concepts and Delimitation in Polyploids and Hybrids

Elvira Hörandl

2022Plants52 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hybridization and polyploidization are important processes for plant evolution. However, classification of hybrid or polyploid species has been notoriously difficult because of the complexity of processes and different evolutionary scenarios that do not fit with classical species concepts. Polyploid complexes are formed via combinations of allopolyploidy, autopolyploidy and homoploid hybridization with persisting sexual reproduction, resulting in many discrete lineages that have been classified as species. Polyploid complexes with facultative apomixis result in complicated net-work like clusters, or rarely in agamospecies. Various case studies illustrate the problems that apply to traditional species concepts to hybrids and polyploids. Conceptual progress can be made if lineage formation is accepted as an inevitable consequence of meiotic sex, which is established already in the first eukaryotes as a DNA restoration tool. The turnaround of the viewpoint that sex forms species as lineages helps to overcome traditional thinking of species as "units". Lineage formation and self-sustainability is the prerequisite for speciation and can also be applied to hybrids and polyploids. Species delimitation is aided by the improved recognition of lineages via various novel -omics methods, by understanding meiosis functions, and by recognizing functional phenotypes by considering morphological-physiological-ecological adaptations.

Topics & Concepts

PolyploidBiologyApomixisEvolutionary biologyLineage (genetic)Reproductive isolationMeiosisHybridGenetic algorithmSpecies complexPloidyGeneticsBotanyPhylogenetic treeGenePopulationSociologyDemographyPlant Taxonomy and PhylogeneticsPlant Diversity and EvolutionChromosomal and Genetic Variations
Novel Approaches for Species Concepts and Delimitation in Polyploids and Hybrids | Litcius