Abstract
The development of transgenic plants has heightened concern about the possible escape of genetically engineered material into the wild. Hybridization between crops and their wild relatives provides a mechanism by which this could occur. While hybridization has been documented between several crops and wild or weedy relatives, little is known about the persistence of cultivar genes in wild populations in the generations following hybridization. Wild and weedy sunflowers occur sympatrically with cultivated sunflowers throughout much of the cultivation range, and hybridization is known to occur. We surveyed two cultivar-specific RAPD markers in 2700 progeny in a naturally occurring population of wild Helianthus annuus over five generations following a single generation of hybridization with the cultivar. Moderate levels of gene flow were detected in the first generation (42% hybrids at the crop margin) and cultivar allele frequencies did not significantly decline over four subsequent generations. These results indicate that gene flow from cultivated into wild populations of sunflowers can result in the long-term establishment of cultivar alleles in wild populations. Furthermore, we conclude that neutral or favorable transgenes have the potential to escape and persist in wild sunflower populations.
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Received: 1 November 1996/Accepted: 17 January 1997
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Whitton, J., Wolf, D., Arias, D. et al. The persistence of cultivar alleles in wild populations of sunflowers five generations after hybridization. Theor Appl Genet 95, 33–40 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/s001220050529
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s001220050529