RESUMO
Spanish explorers and colonists inadvertently started a massive experiment in evolutionary genetics when they accidentally introduced Avena barbata to California from Spain during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Assays of the Spanish and Californian gene pools of this species for 15 loci show that the present day Spanish gene pool, particularly that of Southwestern Spain, is identical or virtually identical to that of California for five loci and closely similar for nine loci. Despite their similar allelic and single-locus genotypic compositions, the present-day Spanish and Californian gene pools are differently structured on a multilocus genetic basis. Evolutionary implications of these results are discussed.
Assuntos
Plantas/genética , Alelos , Evolução Biológica , California , Grão Comestível , Pool Gênico , Genótipo , EspanhaRESUMO
Using thin-layer chromatography and nulli-tetrasomic and ditellosomic series of Triticum aestivum L. cv. 'Chinese Spring', it has been possible to relate the phenolic compounds found in adult plant leaves and 12 day-old seedling leaves with the chromosomes or chromosome arms 1 B, 2 BL, 3 BL, 5 A, 6 AL, 7 B and 7 DS.
RESUMO
The genetics and linkage relationships of several isozymatic and morphological markers have been investigated in different cultivars of rye (Secale cereale L.). The inheritance and the variability among cultivars of three new isozymatic zones are described: GOT2 and LAP, each of them under the control of a two-allele single locus, namely Got2 and Lap, respectively; and 6PGD1 controlled by two loci, 6Pgd1a and 6Pgd1b, which have alleles in common. Four linkage groups have been found: Acp2-Acp3, Got3-Mdh2-Lper4, Mdh1-6Pgd2-Pgi2, and Pgm-Eper2-[Eper1-Eper3]. The assignment of these four groups to the chromosomes 7R, 3R, 1R, and 4R is discussed.
RESUMO
The amount of outcrossing was estimated using seven enzyme loci assayed in seven populations of rye (Secale cereale L.). Single-locus outcrossing values fluctuated widely from locus to locus in each population. The weighted mean single-locus estimates ranged from 0.716 to 0.946, and multilocus estimates ranged from 0.701 to 0.910. The analysis showed that self-pollination occurred in the rye populations, and, as a result of selfing, populations contained homozygotes in excess of random mating expectations at the seedling stage of development. Low plant density, which causes low pollen density during fertilization, seems to weaken the self-incompatibility system; at low plant density, the outcrossing estimate was significantly lower than was obtained at high plant density.