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Anthropogenic disturbance and habitat differentiation between sexual diploid and apomictic triploidTaraxacum sect.Ruderalia

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Abstract

Co-occurrence of sexual diploid and apomictic triploidTaraxacum sectionRuderalia has been reported frequently. Many suggestions have been put forward with respect to the existence of an ecological differentiation between the cytotypes. In a study of 116Ruderalia populations in the area around Neuchâtel (Switzerland) such a habitat differentiation has been proven. Large differences in the diploid/triploid ratio have been found between different field types. Adjacent fields of different types sometimes had significantly different cytotype ratios. In a canonical correspondence analysis significant vegetation differences were found between fields with mainly diploidRuderalia and fields with mainly triploidRuderalia. Two environmental indicators were significantly positively correlated with ploidy levels, altitude with diploids, and the percentage of therophytes in a vegetation with triploids. The percentage of therophytes is thought to be an indicator of the amount of disturbance due to human activities. At lower altitudes, the diploid/triploid ratio is largely determined by the amount of disturbance. Highly-disturbed fields contain mainly triploids whereas relatively stable fields contain mainly diploids. At higher altitudes there are mainly diploids. The presence of triploidTaraxacum sect.Ruderalia in the region around Neuchâtel appears to be the result of the high amount of human activities of the last few hundred years. Whether the triploid presence is due to immigration or to local formation from diploids is yet unknown.

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Meirmans, P.G., Calame, F.G., Bretagnolle, F. et al. Anthropogenic disturbance and habitat differentiation between sexual diploid and apomictic triploidTaraxacum sect.Ruderalia . Folia Geobot 34, 451–469 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02914922

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