GENETIC AND HISTORICAL RELATIONSHIPS AMONG GEOTHERMALLY ADAPTED AGROSTIS (BENTGRASS) OF NORTH AMERICA AND KAMCHATKA: EVIDENCE FOR A PREVIOUSLY UNRECOGNIZED, THERMALLY ADAPTED TAXON
MICHAEL T. TERCEK, DONALD P. HAUBER, AND STEVEN P. DARWIN
American Journal of Botany, 2003
Abstract
Agrostis species have been known to evolve ecotypes rapidly in response to unusual edaphic conditions. The geographic distribution
of Agrostis taxa in Lassen Volcanic National Park (California) and Yellowstone National Park (Wyoming) in the United States and
the Valley of the Geysers (Kamchatka Peninsula) in Russia suggests that Agrostis scabra might have independently evolved morphologically
similar ecotypes several times. We used RAPDs to show that, contrary to expectation, the thermal populations are not
independently evolved, but instead constitute a single taxon that currently has four names. A UPGMA including the four thermal and
nine nonthermal Agrostis taxa showed that the thermal cluster divides into geographically distinct subclusters, but that two morphologically
distinct thermal taxa do not cluster independently. Even though currently confused with the thermal populations, nonthermal
A. scabra is not closely related. An analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) showed significant differentiation between the thermal
populations and the nonthermal species sampled in this study. Splitting a hypothesized thermal operational taxonomic unit (OTU) into
its components (geographically separated populations) does not greatly affect the partitioning of variation among OTUs. All thermal
populations therefore should be assigned to the same taxon, but its taxonomic rank cannot be determined at this time.
Key words: Agrostis; bentgrass; geothermal; Gramineae; heat tolerance; Kamchatka, Russia; Lassen Volcanic National Park,
California; Poaceae; thermal; Yellowstone Naitonal Park, Wyoming.
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