Search results for "Chloroplast capture"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Chloroplast DNA evidence for introgression and long distance dispersal in the desert annualSenecio flavus (Asteraceae)

1995

Phylogenetic analysis of chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) restriction site variation supports a close genetic relationship between the Southwest AsianSenecio flavus subsp.breviflorus and the North AmericanS. mohavensis. The intercontinental disjunct distribution of these two desert annuals may have originated via long distance dispersal. The chloroplast genomes of the Southern and North AfricanS. flavus subsp.flavus and subsp.breviflorus differ by at least ten restriction sites, while at most two restriction sites differentiate the cpDNA genomes of subsp.breviflorus and the outgroupS. squalidus. This suggests that the cpDNA genome ofS. flavus subsp.breviflorus may have resulted from introgression an…

Phylogenetic treeChloroplast captureDisjunct distributionfood and beveragesIntrogressionPlant ScienceBiologyequipment and suppliesGenomeRestriction siteChloroplast DNABotanybacteriaBiological dispersalheterocyclic compoundsskin and connective tissue diseasesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant Systematics and Evolution
researchProduct

Rumbling Orchids: How To Assess Divergent Evolution Between Chloroplast Endosymbionts and the Nuclear Host.

2015

Phylogenetic relationships inferred from multilocus organellar and nuclear DNA data are often difficult to resolve because of evolutionary conflicts among gene trees. However, conflicting or "outlier" associations (i.e., linked pairs of "operational terminal units" in two phylogenies) among these data sets often provide valuable information on evolutionary processes such as chloroplast capture following hybridization, incomplete lineage sorting, and horizontal gene transfer. Statistical tools that to date have been used in cophylogenetic studies only also have the potential to test for the degree of topological congruence between organellar and nuclear data sets and reliably detect outlier …

0301 basic medicineChloroplastsDNA PlantBiologyCoalescent theory03 medical and health sciencesCatasetinaePhylogeneticsGeneticsOrchidaceaeSymbiosisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyPhylogenetic treeChloroplast captureEcologyDNA Chloroplastbiology.organism_classificationClassificationBiological EvolutionDivergent evolution030104 developmental biologyEvolutionary biologyOutlierDistance matrices in phylogenySoftwareSystematic biology
researchProduct

Chloroplast DNA and isozyme evidence on the evolution ofSenecio vulgaris (Asteraceae)

1997

Chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) and isozyme variation were analyzed over a range of populations of two infraspecific taxa of the tetraploidSenecio vulgaris. The isozyme data were supportive of the hypothesis that the weedy and cosmopolitanS. vulgaris var.vulgaris is an evolutionary derivative ofS. vulgaris subsp.denticulatus from the coasts of W Europe and montane altitudes in S Spain and Sicily. The two taxa exhibited a very high genetic identity with subsp.denticulatus containing slightly more isozyme diversity than was found in var.vulgaris. — Three cpDNA haplotypes (A, B, C) already known from other Mediterranean diploid species ofSenecio were resolved in var.vulgaris, and an additional fourth …

Genetic diversityChloroplast DNAbiologyChloroplast captureRange (biology)BotanyHaplotypeSenecio vulgarisIntrogressionPlant SciencePloidybiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant Systematics and Evolution
researchProduct

Data from: Rumbling orchids: how to assess divergent evolution between chloroplast endosymbionts and the nuclear host

2015

Phylogenetic relationships inferred from multilocus organellar and nuclear DNA data are often difficult to resolve because of evolutionary conflicts among gene trees. However, conflicting or “outlier” associations (i.e., linked pairs of “operational terminal units” in two phylogenies) among these data sets often provide valuable information on evolutionary processes such as chloroplast capture following hybridization, incomplete lineage sorting, and horizontal gene transfer. Statistical tools that to date have been used in cophylogenetic studies only also have the potential to test for the degree of topological congruence between organellar and nuclear data sets and reliably detect outlier …

medicine and health caretopological incongruenceSatyriumCatasetinaeMedicineEulophiinaeCymbidiinaeChloroplast captureCyrtopodiinaeOrchidsLife sciencescophylogenetic toolorganelle-nucleus-coevolution
researchProduct