4.3 Article

Pinguicula vulgaris in central Europe: when does one species turn into another?

Journal

PRESLIA
Volume 94, Issue 2, Pages 275-304

Publisher

CZECH BOTANICAL SOC
DOI: 10.23855/preslia.2022.275

Keywords

AFLP; carnivorous plants; cpDNA; genome size; geographic isolation; ITS; Pinguicula bohemica; Pinguicula vulgaris

Categories

Funding

  1. European Social Fund
  2. Education for Competitiveness Operational Programme [CZ.1.07/2.3.00/30.0004]
  3. Ministry of Science and Higher Education of Poland [N18/DBS/000002]

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This study investigated the ploidy level, genome size, seed structure, and genetic differentiation of taxa of Pinguicula vulgaris agg. in Europe, particularly focusing on the taxon P. bohemica. The results confirmed that P. bohemica and all other taxa are octoploid, and the absolute genome size differentiates the morphologically similar taxa. Molecular markers revealed distinct groups within the central European populations of P. vulgaris agg., including a new lineage named P. polonica. P. bohemica and P. polonica showed significant genetic differentiation from P. vulgaris s.s. and P. vulgaris var. bicolor. Spatial isolation played a significant role in the divergence of isolated lineages within P. vulgaris agg.
Pinguicula vulgaris is one of the most common carnivorous plants in the Northern Hemisphere. It is a member of the species complex (P. vulgaris agg.) of which in Europe six taxa are recognized at different taxonomic ranks. One of them is P. bohemica, a taxon considered endemic to the Czech Republic, for which there are varied reports on its chromosome number (ploidy level) and contrasting opinions on its taxonomic rank. Based on the persistent instability of the taxonomy of this group in central Europe, we investigated the ploidy level, genome size, seed structure and genetic differentiation of taxa of P. vulgaris agg. in order to resolve the questions connected with P. bohemica. We sampled all taxa currently recognized as members of P. vulgaris agg. in Europe. Karyological analysis supported the octoploid level for P. bohemica and all other taxa. and flow cytometry further supported cytotype uniformity. Although generally conservative, the absolute genome size differentiates the morphologically similar taxa in P. vulgaris agg. Molecular markers suggested the presence of distinct groups within the central European populations of P. vulgaris agg.. where the groups correspond to already recognized or even unrecognized taxa at the infraspecific level. We identified another lineage from southern Poland within the P. vulgaris group (with provisional name P. polonica). Most probably it is a direct descendant of the P. bohemica lineage, which diversified under isolation. The taxa P. bohemica and P. polonica are genetically well differentiated from P. vulgaris s.s. and P. vulgaris var. bicolor. The molecular-genetic differentiation of P. bohemica is comparable to narrowly endemic taxa from central Italy. Spatial isolation seems to be an important force causing the gradual divergence of isolated lineages within the P. vulgaris agg. Considering all the distinctive features, we suggest a subspecific category for P. bohemica. thus P. vulgaris subsp. bohemica.

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