A chromatographic and cytological study of Dryopteris dilatata in eastern North America

1969 ◽  
Vol 47 (9) ◽  
pp. 1337-1344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl-Johan Widén ◽  
Donald M. Britton

The phloroglucinol derivatives found in the rhizomes of Dryopteris intermedia Gray, diploid D. "dilatata", and D. campyloptera Clarkson, all from eastern North America, are compared and contrasted with those found in D. assimilis S. Walker, D. dilatata A. Gray, and D. spinulosa Watt from Europe, as well as diploid D. “dilatata” from Alaska. The presence or absence, and the morphology, of internal secreting hairs in these species was useful for comparing taxa and suggesting evolutionary patterns. Chromatographic analysis gives many more categories or finer divisions of D. dilatata s.l. than does genome analysis, which has suggested that D. assimilis, D. intermedia, and western D. “dilatata” represent the same ancestral genome.

1971 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 247-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl-Johan Widén ◽  
Donald M. Britton

A chromatographic analysis of the phloroglucinol derivatives of 123 collections of Dryopteris intermedia Gray (2x), D. assimilis S. Walker (2x) from western North America, D. "dilatata" from eastern North America (2x), D. "austriaca" from Japan and Kamchatka, "Aspidium dilatatum" from Siberia, D. campyloptera Clarkson (4x) from eastern North America, D. spinulosa Watt (4x) from North America, the hybrids D. "dilatata" × campyloptera (3x) and D. intermedia × spinulosa (3x) is presented. D. "dilatata" from eastern North America has an extremely variable phloroglucinol content, which limits the utility of the analysis for taxonomy. The chromatographic and cytological results are discussed in connection with the evolution of the two tetraploid taxa, D. campyloptera and D. spinulosa. The intra-specific variability of each taxon is discussed and compared with the extensive European studies. The material investigated may be considered to belong to the following species: D. intermedia Gray (2x), D. assimilis S. Walker (2x), D. campyloptera Clarkson (4x), and D. spinulosa Watt (4x). Only two different ancestral genomes are considered to be present in these four species, one in the first three species, and two in D. spinulosa.


1971 ◽  
Vol 49 (9) ◽  
pp. 1589-1600 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.-J. Widén ◽  
D. M. Britton

Chromatographic analyses of the phloroglucinol derivatives of 86 collections comprising Dryopteris filix-mas (L.) Schott (4x), D. arguta (Kaulf.) Watt (2x), D. marginalis (L.) A. Gray (2x), and the hybrids D. filix-mas × marginalis (3x), D. cristata × marginalis (3x), D. goldiana × marginalis (2x), and D. intermedia × marginalis (2x) in North America is presented. Material of D. filix-mas from the West differed from that collected in the East. The western material was rich in filixic acid, and had a chromatographic spectrum similar to European D. filix-mas s. str. D. marginalis is lacking filixic acid, and is not closely related to D. filix-mas based on chromatographic evidence. Methylene-bisaspidinol, a compound not previously found in Dryopteris, was isolated from D. marginalis. D. arguta contains filixic acid, and has a chromatographic pattern close to that of D. abbreviata (DC.) Newman, which in turn is one of the ancestors of D. filix-mas s. str. in Europe. The influence of D. marginalis in the phloroglucinol spectrum of the interspecific hybrids studied was very strong except in the hybrid D. filix-mas × marginalis.


1974 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 627-638 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald M. Britton ◽  
Carl-Johan Widén

Chromatographic analyses of the phloroglucinol derivatives in 213 collections of Dryopteris from eastern North America and particularly Quebec were made. The taxa studied were two diploid species, D. assimilis S. Walker and D. intermedia (Muhl.) A. Gray; two tetraploids, D. spinulosa Watt and D. campyloptera Clarkson; the triploid hybrid, D. × triploidea Wherry; all in the D. spinulosa complex. Also studied were the tetraploid species D. cristata (L.) Gray, the triploid hybrid, D. × boollii (Tuckerm.) Underwood, the tetraploid species, D. filix-mas (L.) Schott, and the diploid D. marginalis (L.) A. Gray. Both glandular and glabrous specimens of D. assimilis and D. campyloptera were studied, but it was found that these characteristics were not necessarily correlated with the presence or absence of phloroglucinols. Dryopteris campyloptera consists of plants which may be "phloroglucinol rich" or "phloroglucinol poor," while D. assimilis and D. spinulosa are both low in phloroglucinol content as compared to European plants. The geographical ranges of the species is briefly considered and the chemical uniformity of some taxa and the variability of others is discussed.


1971 ◽  
Vol 49 (7) ◽  
pp. 1141-1154 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.-J. Widén ◽  
D. M. Britton

A chromatographic analysis of the phloroglucinol derivatives of 136 collections of D. ludoviciana (Kunze) Small (2x), D. goldiana (Hook.) A. Gray (2x), D. cristata (L.) A. Gray (4x), D. celsa (Palmer) Small (4x), D. clintoniana (D. C. Eaton) Dowell (6x), and six of their hybrids is presented. The phloroglucinol derivatives in these taxa exist as complicated mixtures of butyryl (B), propionyl, (P), and acetyl (A) homologs. Each taxon seems to contain different percentages of homologs. Albaspidin PA (I) and flavaspidic acid AB (IV) have been isolated from Dryopteris for the first time. Cytological results suggest that D. celsa and D. cristata are allotetraploid species derived from D. ludoviciana and D. goldiana; and D. ludoviciana and an unknown diploid, respectively; whereas D. clintoniana is an allohexaploid derived from D. goldiana and D. cristata. The chromatographic results support these interpretations. Phloroglucinol compounds that are found in the parent species also occur in their interspecific hybrids.


2020 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 767-778
Author(s):  
Eranga Wettewa ◽  
Nick Bailey ◽  
Lisa E. Wallace

Abstract—Species complexes present considerable problems for a working taxonomy due to the presence of intraspecific variation, hybridization, polyploidy, and phenotypic plasticity. Understanding evolutionary patterns using molecular markers can allow for a more thorough assessment of evolutionary lineages than traditional morphological markers. In this study, we evaluated genetic diversity and phylogenetic patterns among taxa of the Platanthera hyperborea (Orchidaceae) complex, which includes diploid (Platanthera aquilonis) and polyploid (Platanthera hyperborea, P. huronensis, and P. convallariifolia) taxa spanning North America, Greenland, Iceland, and Asia. We found that three floral morphological characters overlap among the polyploid taxa, but the diploid species has smaller flowers. DNA sequence variation in a plastid (rpL16 intron) and a nuclear (ITS) marker indicated that at least three diploid species have contributed to the genomes of the polyploid taxa, suggesting all are of allopolyploid origin. Platanthera convallariifolia is most like P. dilatata and P. stricta, whereas P. huronensis and P. hyperborea appear to have originated from crosses of P. dilatata and P. aquilonis. Platanthera huronensis, which is found across North America, has multiple origins and reciprocal maternal parentage from the diploid species. By contrast, P. hyperborea, restricted to Greenland and Iceland, appears to have originated from a small founding population of hybrids in which P. dilatata was the maternal parent. Geographic structure was found among polyploid forms in North America. The area of Manitoba, Canada appears to be a contact zone among geographically diverse forms from eastern and western North America. Given the geographic and genetic variation found, we recommend continued recognition of four green-flowered species within this complex, but caution that there may be additional cryptic taxa within North America.


1986 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 227-243 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew L. Christenson

Although the interest in shell middens in North America is often traced to reports of the discoveries in Danish kjoekkenmoeddings in the mid-nineteenth century, extensive shell midden studies were already occurring on the East Coast by that time. This article reviews selected examples of this early work done by geologists and naturalists, which served as a foundation for shell midden studies by archaeologists after the Civil War.


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