Artículos de revistas
Can achene selection in sunflower crop–wild hybrids by pre-dispersal seed predators hasten the return to phenotypically wild sunflowers?
Fecha
2015-04-16Registro en:
Presotto, Alejandro Daniel; Pandolfo, Claudio Ezequiel; Poverene, María Mónica; Cantamutto, Miguel Ángel; Can achene selection in sunflower crop–wild hybrids by pre-dispersal seed predators hasten the return to phenotypically wild sunflowers?; Springer; Euphytica; 208; 3; 16-4-2015; 453-462
0014-2336
1573-5060
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Presotto, Alejandro Daniel
Pandolfo, Claudio Ezequiel
Poverene, María Mónica
Cantamutto, Miguel Ángel
Resumen
Bird attack is a serious limitation to sunflower yield in several regions of the world, but it could also cause selection. The wild Helianthus annuus, naturalized in several regions of the world, hybridizes with the crop and produces crop–wild offspring. It is unknown how the selective force of seed predation by birds could drive evolution after a hybridization event. After two generations of natural selection exerted by birds (mostly by Eared Dove and Monk Parakeets), achene and plant traits of the crop–wild hybrid progeny were compared with the same hybrid progeny without any selection by birds. After two generations of bird selection the achene width, thickness and weight decreased by an average of 18.5, 26.7 and 49.2 %, respectively. Also in response to bird selection there was a correlated increase in the plant height, stem diameter, number of heads and a reduction in head diameter and the number of achenes per head. The phenotype of crop–wild plants selected by birds resembles wild plants, whereas the plants without any selection were intermediate between the parents. These results indicate that selection exerted by birds could result in the rapid evolution of crop–wild sunflower populations.