Fuente:
PubMed "pollination"
Plants (Basel). 2026 Mar 20;15(6):955. doi: 10.3390/plants15060955.ABSTRACTThe Balkan Peninsula is a biodiversity hotspot where topographic and habitat heterogeneity have shaped genetic differentiation. Polyploidization significantly contributes to diversification within plant lineages, including the allopolyploid complex of the Austrian speedwell, which comprises diploid, tetraploid and hexaploid lineages. We sampled 751 individuals from 50 populations belonging to this complex across the Balkan Peninsula and Central Europe. Diversity patterns were investigated through microsatellite markers (SSRs), plastid DNA sequences, ploidy estimations, morphological data and climatic niche differentiation analysis. Five lineages were detected within the complex according to nuclear DNA data. The plastid DNA haplotypes form two main groups that overall match those detected by SSR data and could suggest that the hexaploid lineage resulted from two different allopolyploid events. The hexaploid shows higher nuclear genetic diversity and morphological variation than its lower-ploidy relatives, which might allow the species to respond to a wider range of environmental conditions and be responsible for its success (i.e., a broader geographic range and ecological niche). Style length is a crucial character to distinguish diploids from polyploids, which may affect pollination biology within the complex.PMID:41901474 | PMC:PMC13030098 | DOI:10.3390/plants15060955