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Rapid evolutionary divergence and ecotypic diversification of germination behavior in weedy rice populations
by
Ellstrand, Norman C
, Yang, Chao
, Lu, Bao-Rong
, Xia, Han-Bing
, Xia, Hui
in
Adaptation, Physiological
/ Biological Evolution
/ China
/ Critical temperature
/ crops
/ Cultivars
/ Divergence
/ divergent evolution
/ Diversification
/ Domestication
/ Dormancy
/ Ecological genetics
/ Ecotype
/ ecotypic differentiation
/ Environment
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary genetics
/ ferality
/ Genes
/ genetics
/ Germination
/ growth & development
/ habitats
/ latitudinal variation
/ Latitudinal variations
/ Linear Models
/ local adaptation
/ Mutation
/ Oryza
/ Oryza - genetics
/ Oryza - growth & development
/ Oryza - physiology
/ Oryza sativa
/ Oryza sativa f. spontanea
/ physiology
/ Plant Dormancy
/ Plant species
/ Plant Weeds
/ Plant Weeds - genetics
/ Plant Weeds - growth & development
/ Plant Weeds - physiology
/ Plants
/ plant–environment interaction
/ Populations
/ Rice
/ Seed dormancy
/ Seed germination
/ Seeds
/ Seeds - genetics
/ Seeds - growth & development
/ Seeds - physiology
/ Soil
/ Temperate regions
/ Temperature
/ temperature response
/ Transition temperature
/ weed evolution
/ Weeds
2011
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Rapid evolutionary divergence and ecotypic diversification of germination behavior in weedy rice populations
by
Ellstrand, Norman C
, Yang, Chao
, Lu, Bao-Rong
, Xia, Han-Bing
, Xia, Hui
in
Adaptation, Physiological
/ Biological Evolution
/ China
/ Critical temperature
/ crops
/ Cultivars
/ Divergence
/ divergent evolution
/ Diversification
/ Domestication
/ Dormancy
/ Ecological genetics
/ Ecotype
/ ecotypic differentiation
/ Environment
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary genetics
/ ferality
/ Genes
/ genetics
/ Germination
/ growth & development
/ habitats
/ latitudinal variation
/ Latitudinal variations
/ Linear Models
/ local adaptation
/ Mutation
/ Oryza
/ Oryza - genetics
/ Oryza - growth & development
/ Oryza - physiology
/ Oryza sativa
/ Oryza sativa f. spontanea
/ physiology
/ Plant Dormancy
/ Plant species
/ Plant Weeds
/ Plant Weeds - genetics
/ Plant Weeds - growth & development
/ Plant Weeds - physiology
/ Plants
/ plant–environment interaction
/ Populations
/ Rice
/ Seed dormancy
/ Seed germination
/ Seeds
/ Seeds - genetics
/ Seeds - growth & development
/ Seeds - physiology
/ Soil
/ Temperate regions
/ Temperature
/ temperature response
/ Transition temperature
/ weed evolution
/ Weeds
2011
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Rapid evolutionary divergence and ecotypic diversification of germination behavior in weedy rice populations
by
Ellstrand, Norman C
, Yang, Chao
, Lu, Bao-Rong
, Xia, Han-Bing
, Xia, Hui
in
Adaptation, Physiological
/ Biological Evolution
/ China
/ Critical temperature
/ crops
/ Cultivars
/ Divergence
/ divergent evolution
/ Diversification
/ Domestication
/ Dormancy
/ Ecological genetics
/ Ecotype
/ ecotypic differentiation
/ Environment
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary genetics
/ ferality
/ Genes
/ genetics
/ Germination
/ growth & development
/ habitats
/ latitudinal variation
/ Latitudinal variations
/ Linear Models
/ local adaptation
/ Mutation
/ Oryza
/ Oryza - genetics
/ Oryza - growth & development
/ Oryza - physiology
/ Oryza sativa
/ Oryza sativa f. spontanea
/ physiology
/ Plant Dormancy
/ Plant species
/ Plant Weeds
/ Plant Weeds - genetics
/ Plant Weeds - growth & development
/ Plant Weeds - physiology
/ Plants
/ plant–environment interaction
/ Populations
/ Rice
/ Seed dormancy
/ Seed germination
/ Seeds
/ Seeds - genetics
/ Seeds - growth & development
/ Seeds - physiology
/ Soil
/ Temperate regions
/ Temperature
/ temperature response
/ Transition temperature
/ weed evolution
/ Weeds
2011
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Rapid evolutionary divergence and ecotypic diversification of germination behavior in weedy rice populations
Journal Article
Rapid evolutionary divergence and ecotypic diversification of germination behavior in weedy rice populations
2011
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Overview
• Feral plants have evolved from well-studied crops, providing good systems for elucidation of how weediness evolves. As yet, they have been largely neglected for this purpose. The evolution of weediness can occur by simple back mutations in domestication genes (domestication in reverse). Whether the evolutionary steps to weediness always occur in reverse remains largely unknown. • We examined seed germination behavior in recently evolved weedy rice (Oryza sativa f. spontanea) populations and their coexisting cultivars in eastern and north-eastern China to address whether ‘dedomestication' is the simple reverse of domestication. • We found that these weedy populations did not diverge from their progenitors by reverting to the pre-domestication trait of seed dormancy. Instead, they have evolved a novel mechanism to avoid growing in inappropriate environments via changes in critical temperature cues for seed germination. Furthermore, we found evidence for subsequent ecotypic divergence of these populations such that the critical temperature for germination correlates with the local habitat temperature at latitudinal gradients. • The origins of problematic plant species, weeds and invasives, have already been studied in detail. These plants can thus be used as systems for studying rapid evolution. To determine whether and how that evolution is adaptive, experiments such as those described here can be performed.
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd,John Wiley & Sons,Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
Subject
/ China
/ crops
/ Dormancy
/ Ecotype
/ ferality
/ Genes
/ genetics
/ habitats
/ Mutation
/ Oryza
/ Oryza - growth & development
/ Plant Weeds - growth & development
/ Plants
/ plant–environment interaction
/ Rice
/ Seeds
/ Seeds - growth & development
/ Soil
/ Weeds
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