4.6 Article

New reports of nuclear DNA content for 407 vascular plant taxa from the United States

Journal

ANNALS OF BOTANY
Volume 110, Issue 8, Pages 1623-1629

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcs222

Keywords

Genome size; C-value; flow cytometry; vascular plants; angiosperms; gymnosperms; monilphytes; lycophytes; Wisconsin; Michigan

Categories

Funding

  1. US National Science Foundation's Dimensions of Biodiversity program [DEB-1046355]
  2. Division Of Environmental Biology
  3. Direct For Biological Sciences [1046355] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The amount of DNA in an unreplicated haploid nuclear genome (C-value) ranges over several orders of magnitude among plant species and represents a key metric for comparing plant genomes. To extend previously published datasets on plant nuclear content and to characterize the DNA content of many species present in one region of North America, flow cytometry was used to estimate C-values of woody and herbaceous species collected in Wisconsin and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, USA. A total of 674 samples and vouchers were collected from locations across Wisconsin and Michigan, USA. From these, C-value estimates were obtained for 514 species, subspecies and varieties of vascular plants. Nuclei were extracted from samples of these species in one of two buffers, stained with the fluorochrome propidium iodide, and an Accuri C-6 flow cytometer was used to measure fluorescence peaks relative to those of an internal standard. Replicate extractions, coefficients of variation and comparisons to published C-values in the same and related species were used to confirm the accuracy and reliability of our results. Prime C-values for 407 taxa are provided for which no published data exist, including 390 angiosperms, two gymnosperms, ten monilophytes and five lycophytes. Non-prime reports for 107 additional taxa are also provided. The prime values represent new reports for 129 genera and five families (of 303 genera and 97 families sampled). New family C-value maxima or minima are reported for Betulaceae, Ericaceae, Ranunculaceae and Sapindaceae. These data provide the basis for phylogenetic analyses of C-value variation and future analyses of how C-values covary with other functional traits.

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