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Introgressive hybridization in plants

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lead to species which typically do not hybridize and backcross to do so with relative ease. Plant breeders also manipulate their subjects to hybridize in order to optimize their hardiness, appearance, or whatever desired traits they want to select for. This type of hybridization has been particularly impactful for the production of many crop species, including but not limited to: certain types of rice, corn, wheat, barley, and rye. Natural introgression can occur with many genera and species, but manipulating the gene pool with artificial/forced introgression is useful for honing in on desired characteristics, such as drought tolerance or pest resistance.
17: 215:) are able to produce semi-fertile or fertile offspring, even from wide crosses. The ability of daffodils, such as the yellow trumpet Narcissi and Poets’ Narcissi to hybridize and backcross allows for the vast variety of options modern-day gardeners have to select from. Although daffodils do hybridize and introgress in nature, artificial introgression allows for breeders to take species that are geographically separated and make unique crosses that would not appear naturally. 168:(P. balsamifera, P. angustifolia and P. trichocarpa) conducted along the Rock Mountain range in the U.S. and Canada found extensive introgression in areas of species converge. Genomic sequencing even showed a trispecies hybrid in these overlapping areas. Another study found a hybrid zone in Utah where there was a unidirectional flow of introgression between 114:
are closely related and their phenotypic differences (color/pattern/size) are distinct. Once introgression occurs, the resulting offspring display a wide array of color combinations, as well as varying flower size. Iris fulva shows a tendency for asymmetrical introgression, where it transfers more
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Although some genera of plants hybridize and introgress more easily than others, in certain scenarios, external factors may contribute to an increased rate of hybridization. The phenomenon known as Hybridization of the Habitat echoes this idea, explaining that disturbances in a natural habitat can
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In the early days of hybrid research, it was commonly believed that there was insufficient evidence of hybridization in nature because hybridization would mostly produce sterile or unfit offspring. Through experimentation and improved
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Hybridization among poplars is common where ever populations overlap, however the degree of introgression varies greatly depending on the species. One study exploring the extent of introgression among three species of
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capabilities, we now see that the ability to produce fertile hybrid offspring varies by genus, within the plant kingdom. A few examples of species with the capacity to produce fertile hybrids are given below.
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One of the most significant early studies of plant hybridization involved three species of irises. Although they commonly form crosses where their natural habitats overlap, there is no evidence that
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Hao, Ming; Zhang, Lianquan; Ning, Shunzong; Huang, Lin; Yuan, Zhongwei; Wu, Bihua; Yan, Zehong; Dai, Shoufen; Jiang, Bo; Zheng, Youliang; Liu, Dengcai (2020-03-06).
57: 432: 143:). Within a particular region, the population showed differences in morphological features which indicated there may be hybridization with 513:"Natural hybridization between cultivated poplars and their wild relatives: evidence and consequences for native poplar populations" 408: 627: 448:"Adaptive introgression and maintenance of a trispecies hybrid complex in range-edge populations of Populus" 566:"Introgression of Novel Traits from a Wild Wheat Relative Improves Drought Adaptation in Wheat" 188:
for crop production. One of the ways crop species can be manipulated is by crossing them with
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Chhatre, Vikram E.; Evans, Luke M.; DiFazio, Stephen P.; Keller, Stephen R. (2018).
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Vanden Broeck, An; Villar, Marc; Van Bockstaele, Erik; VanSlycken, Jos (2005).
273:"The Resurgence of Introgression Breeding, as Exemplified in Wheat Improvement" 132: 418: 621: 589: 546: 537: 512: 481: 298: 103: 25: 373: 289: 607: 510: 489: 398: 383: 316: 197: 29: 581: 28:, is the flow of genetic material between divergent lineages via repeated 561: 128: 564:; Kruger, Greg R.; Baenziger, P. Stephen; Walia, Harkamal (2013-02-20). 358: 334: 257: 233: 97: 472: 447: 189: 350: 249: 59:
generation hybrid breeds with one or both of its parental species.
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has been crossed and introgressed with the domesticated wheat
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Introgression has played a major role in the development of
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Placido, Dante F.; Campbell, Malachy T.; Folsom, Jing J.;
155:, indicating introgression had occurred in one direction. 445: 559: 174: 38: 85: 115:genetic material into hybrid offspring than either 51: 270: 20:The process of backcrossing with parental species 619: 231: 192:. For instance, the wild wheat relative species 400:Evolutionary biology : a plant perspective 32:. In plants, this backcrossing occurs when an 234:"Hybridization as an Evolutionary Stimulus" 24:Introgressive hybridization, also known as 431:: CS1 maint: location missing publisher ( 597: 536: 471: 306: 288: 371: 332: 15: 620: 396: 232:Anderson, E.; Stebbins, G. L. (1954). 62: 328: 326: 175:Examples of artificial introgression 147:. Researchers discovered that these 13: 14: 644: 323: 170:P. angustifolia and P. fremontii. 117:Iris hexagona or Iris brevicaulis 86:Examples of natural introgression 151:contained chloroplast DNA from 553: 504: 439: 390: 365: 335:"Hybridization of the Habitat" 264: 225: 141:Helianthus annuus ssp. texanus 127:Differential introgression of 1: 218: 145:H. debilis ssp cucumenifolius 122: 71: 397:Cruzan, Mitchell B. (2018). 203: 7: 375:Introgressive hybridization 10: 649: 277:Frontiers in Plant Science 158: 135:was first seen among the 90: 517:Annals of Forest Science 372:Anderson, Edgar (1949). 333:Anderson, Edgar (1948). 179: 628:Hybridisation (biology) 290:10.3389/fpls.2020.00252 538:10.1051/forest:2005072 384:10.5962/bhl.title.4553 378:. New York: J. Wiley. 53: 21: 582:10.1104/pp.113.214262 54: 52:{\displaystyle F_{1}} 19: 153:H. d. cucumennfolius 36: 529:2005AnFSc..62..601V 464:2018MolEc..27.4820C 194:Agropyron elongatum 63:Source of variation 49: 22: 473:10.1111/mec.14820 458:(23): 4820–4838. 452:Molecular Ecology 410:978-0-19-088268-6 198:Triticum aestivum 190:wild type species 640: 612: 611: 601: 576:(4): 1806–1819. 570:Plant Physiology 557: 551: 550: 540: 508: 502: 501: 475: 443: 437: 436: 430: 422: 403:. New York, NY. 394: 388: 387: 369: 363: 362: 330: 321: 320: 310: 292: 268: 262: 261: 229: 137:common sunflower 58: 56: 55: 50: 48: 47: 648: 647: 643: 642: 641: 639: 638: 637: 618: 617: 616: 615: 558: 554: 509: 505: 444: 440: 424: 423: 411: 395: 391: 370: 366: 351:10.2307/2405610 331: 324: 269: 265: 250:10.2307/2405784 230: 226: 221: 206: 182: 177: 161: 133:nuclear genomes 125: 111:ris brevicaulis 93: 88: 79:genetic testing 74: 65: 43: 39: 37: 34: 33: 12: 11: 5: 646: 636: 635: 630: 614: 613: 552: 523:(7): 601–613. 503: 438: 409: 389: 364: 322: 263: 223: 222: 220: 217: 205: 202: 181: 178: 176: 173: 160: 157: 124: 121: 92: 89: 87: 84: 73: 70: 64: 61: 46: 42: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 645: 634: 631: 629: 626: 625: 623: 609: 605: 600: 595: 591: 587: 583: 579: 575: 571: 567: 563: 556: 548: 544: 539: 534: 530: 526: 522: 518: 514: 507: 499: 495: 491: 487: 483: 479: 474: 469: 465: 461: 457: 453: 449: 442: 434: 428: 420: 416: 412: 406: 402: 401: 393: 385: 381: 377: 376: 368: 360: 356: 352: 348: 344: 340: 336: 329: 327: 318: 314: 309: 304: 300: 296: 291: 286: 282: 278: 274: 267: 259: 255: 251: 247: 243: 239: 235: 228: 224: 216: 214: 210: 201: 199: 195: 191: 187: 172: 171: 167: 156: 154: 150: 149:H. a. texanus 146: 142: 138: 134: 130: 120: 118: 113: 112: 106: 105: 104:Iris hexagona 100: 99: 83: 80: 69: 60: 44: 40: 31: 27: 26:introgression 18: 573: 569: 562:Cui, Xinping 555: 520: 516: 506: 455: 451: 441: 399: 392: 374: 367: 342: 338: 280: 276: 266: 241: 237: 227: 212: 207: 183: 169: 166:poplar trees 162: 152: 148: 144: 140: 129:chloroplasts 126: 116: 110: 102: 96: 94: 75: 66: 30:backcrossing 23: 622:Categories 419:1050360688 345:(1): 1–9. 244:(4): 378. 219:References 123:Sunflowers 98:Iris fulva 72:Background 590:0032-0889 547:1286-4560 482:1365-294X 427:cite book 339:Evolution 299:1664-462X 238:Evolution 213:Narcissus 209:Daffodils 204:Daffodils 608:23426195 498:51908670 490:30071141 317:32211007 599:3613457 525:Bibcode 460:Bibcode 359:2405610 308:7067975 283:: 252. 258:2405784 211:(genus 159:Poplars 633:Plants 606:  596:  588:  545:  496:  488:  480:  417:  407:  357:  315:  305:  297:  256:  91:Irises 494:S2CID 355:JSTOR 254:JSTOR 186:wheat 180:Wheat 107:, or 77:phylo 604:PMID 586:ISSN 543:ISSN 486:PMID 478:ISSN 433:link 415:OCLC 405:ISBN 313:PMID 295:ISSN 131:and 594:PMC 578:doi 574:161 533:doi 468:doi 380:doi 347:doi 303:PMC 285:doi 246:doi 624:: 602:. 592:. 584:. 572:. 568:. 541:. 531:. 521:62 519:. 515:. 492:. 484:. 476:. 466:. 456:27 454:. 450:. 429:}} 425:{{ 413:. 353:. 341:. 337:. 325:^ 311:. 301:. 293:. 281:11 279:. 275:. 252:. 240:. 236:. 119:. 101:, 610:. 580:: 549:. 535:: 527:: 500:. 470:: 462:: 435:) 421:. 386:. 382:: 361:. 349:: 343:2 319:. 287:: 260:. 248:: 242:8 139:( 109:I 45:1 41:F

Index


introgression
backcrossing
genetic testing
Iris fulva
Iris hexagona
Iris brevicaulis
chloroplasts
nuclear genomes
common sunflower
poplar trees
wheat
wild type species
Agropyron elongatum
Triticum aestivum
Daffodils
"Hybridization as an Evolutionary Stimulus"
doi
10.2307/2405784
JSTOR
2405784
"The Resurgence of Introgression Breeding, as Exemplified in Wheat Improvement"
doi
10.3389/fpls.2020.00252
ISSN
1664-462X
PMC
7067975
PMID
32211007

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