Genetic Archaeology: The Recovery and Interpretation of Nuclear DNA from a Nineteenth-Century Hypodermic Syringe

2006 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 8-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie Schablitsky
2017 ◽  
Vol 86 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ewa Szczęśniak ◽  
Edyta M. Gola ◽  
Iwona Jędrzejczyk

In Poland, isolated serpentine rocks are exclusive habitats of some <em>Asplenium</em> species, reaching here their north or northeastern border range. One of them was <em>Asplenium onopteris</em>, a diploid European species native to Mediterranean and Atlantic areas. Since the nineteenth century, Polish out-of-range sites of <em>A. onopteris</em> have been quoted in literature without critical verification. Thus, to verify occurrence of this species in Poland, we analyzed the nuclear DNA content and micromorphological features as well as critically reviewed the literature data. We proved that all individuals from Polish populations resembling <em>A. onopteris</em> were tetraploids and should be classified as <em>A. adiantum-nigrum</em>. In addition, we validated a taxon <em>silesiacum</em> reported as co-occurring with <em>A. onopteris</em>. The proposed diagnostic features are insufficient to indisputably delimit this taxon, and distinguishing it as a separate unit is not justified. Analyses of the DNA content revealed also the presence of a triploid <em>A. ×centovallense</em>, a new hybrid for Polish flora.


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