Search results for "Senecio vulgaris"

showing 7 items of 7 documents

A note on leaf venation and the circumscription of Tephroseris (Asteraceae–Senecioneae)

2020

Molecular phylogenetic results had shown that Tephroseris, a genus differentiated from its closest relatives by its pinnately veined leaves, also contains species with palmate leaf venation. This had led to the conclusion that leaf venation is a homoplasious character in the lineage containing Tephroseris. We here take a closer look at leaf venation in Tephroseris and other species of Asteraceae–Senecioneae. We found that leaf venation in Tephroseris is distinct from leaf venation in Jacobaea vulgaris and Senecio vulgaris, which both have pinnately veined leaves as typical for most species of their respective genera, and that description of the leaves of Tephroseris as pinnately veined is i…

0106 biological sciencesJacobaea vulgarisbiologyNemosenecioSenecio vulgarisWilldenowiaPlant ScienceSenecioneaeAsteraceaebiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesTephroserisGenusBotanyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics010606 plant biology & botanyWilldenowia
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Genecological and isozyme studies in Senecio vernalis Waldst. & Kit. and S. vulgaris L. var. vulgaris (Asteraceae) from Central Europe and Israel

1995

Summary Genecological evidence and evidence obtained from an isozyme survey suggest a considerable amount of intraspecific differentiation in Senecio vernalis . Plants of this species from Israel were found to differ strikingly from those of C European (German) origin in most of the traits investigated, e.g., in the possession of pronounced seed dormancy, which seems to be governed by a single gene, a shorter life cycle, lack of rosette growth correlated with stem elongation prior to budding, a larger number of smaller capitula with fewer (disc) florets, and an ephemeral habit with plants only flowering soon after the first winter rains. Both accessions achieved a similar reproductive poten…

EcologybiologyPhylogenetic treeSenecio vulgarisSeed dormancyPlant ScienceAsteraceaebiology.organism_classificationIntraspecific competitionSenecio glaucusBotanyHabit (biology)Senecio vernalisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsFlora
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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
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The Genetics of Evolutionary Change in Senecio vulgaris L.: A QTL Mapping Approach

2001

: The cosmopolitan weed Senecio vulgaris var. vulgaris is likely to have originated from the non-weedy S. vulgaris ssp. denticulatus from which it differs by showing no seed dormancy, by completing its life cycle from germination to seed formation much faster and by lacking ray florets. An F2 generation of 120 individuals obtained through selfing of one hybrid individual between var. vulgaris and ssp. denticulatus was used to construct a linkage map based on RAPD polymorphisms and the presence or absence of ray florets. This linkage map was used for a QTL analysis of 12 characters distinguishing the two taxa. For seven of these 12 characters, three significant QTLs could be found. One of th…

GeneticsBractfungiSeed dormancySenecio vulgarisfood and beveragesSelfingLocus (genetics)Plant ScienceGeneral MedicineBiologyQuantitative trait locusbiology.organism_classificationRAPDGerminationBotanyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant Biology
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Major gene effects during weed evolution: phenotypic characters cosegregate with alleles at the ray floret locus in Senecio vulgaris L. (Asteraceae)

1998

GeneticsbiologySenecio vulgarisLocus (genetics)Asteraceaebiology.organism_classificationPhenotypeMajor geneBotanyGeneticsAlleleWeedMolecular BiologyGenetics (clinical)BiotechnologyJournal of Heredity
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THE OCCURRENCE OF SENECIO VULGARIS L. VAR. VULGARIS AND S. × HELWINGII BEGER EX HEGI (S. VULGARIS × S. VERNALIS WALDST. ET KIT.) IN ISRAEL

1994

Common Groundsel (Senecio vulgarisL. var.vulgaris(2n = 40)) is widespread in the northern hemisphere. In Israel, judging from a herbarium survey, records taken from the Israel Plant Information Center (ROTEM), and field studies, it has a restricted and widely disjunct pattern of geographical distribution, and, thus, is another example of the comparatively large group of weeds in Israel which are extremely stenochorous. The remarkable gaps in its distribution, from the Upper Golan to Mt. Carmel and to the Jerusalem area, are considered primarily to be the result of paleoclimatic changes, whereas its occurrence outside these centers of distribution is probably related to long-distance dispers…

HerbariumbiologyBotanySenecio vulgarisBiological dispersalPlant ScienceDisjunctInformation centerbiology.organism_classificationLarge groupAgronomy and Crop ScienceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIsrael Journal of Plant Sciences
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Genetic basis of speed of development in Senecio vulgaris L var. vulgaris, S. vulgaris ssp. denticulatus (O.F. Muell.) P.D. Sell, and Senecio vernali…

1996

The genetic basis of differences in speed of development from germination to first bud formation was investigated in Senecio vulgaris var. vulgaris and S. vulgaris ssp. denticulatus, and also in S. vernalis sampled from Israel and Germany. In the case of S. vulgaris, F2 segregation analysis and the recovery of very late and very early lines from extreme F2 phenotypes showed that differences can be explained by a single major gene model, whereas segregation data from F2 and backcross progenies in S. vernalis are not incompatible with a digenic model of inheritance. Senecio vernalis from Israel and S. vulgaris var. vulgaris reached the different developmental stages in a substantially shorter…

biologySenecio vulgarisfood and beveragesbiology.organism_classificationMajor geneRosette (botany)GerminationBackcrossingBotanyGeneticsArabidopsis thalianaSenecio vernalisHeterochronyGenetics (clinical)Heredity
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