丹麦草原栽培与野生胡萝卜(Daucus carota)杂交品种的存活与开花。

Environmental biosafety research Pub Date : 2007-10-01 Epub Date: 2007-12-20 DOI:10.1051/ebr:2007044
Thure P Hauser, Sang In Shim
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引用次数: 13

摘要

许多作物物种能够与相关的杂草或野生近缘种杂交,这可能导致栽培基因转移,其中转基因基因转移到野生群体中。然而,目前尚不清楚杂交种及其后代是否能够在自然生境中生存和繁殖,因为遗传的品种性状可能在这种条件下不适应。为了验证这一点,我们在野生胡萝卜(见公式)和栽培胡萝卜(Daucus carota ssp)之间通过控制杂交生产了杂交(F(1))种子。卡罗塔和ssp。将它们与野生胡萝卜种子一起播种到丹麦三个不同年龄的草原上。重复的地块在秋季和春季播种。在接下来的三年里,对新生植物的存活和开花情况进行了监测。杂交胡萝卜和野生胡萝卜在最近受到干扰的地点都存活下来并开花的频率最高,而在两个较老的地点则少得多。杂交胡萝卜在第一年的出苗率比野生胡萝卜高,在实验结束时存活率与野生胡萝卜相似或略低。杂交花的频率与野生植物相同或稍低于野生植物,并且发育较少和较小的伞形花序。尽管与野生胡萝卜相比,繁殖潜力略低,但在丹麦的天然草原上,栽培胡萝卜和野生胡萝卜之间的第一代杂交品种很可能存活下来并产生后代。这与其他研究一起表明,栽培基因可能相对容易地转移到野生胡萝卜种群中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Survival and flowering of hybrids between cultivated and wild carrots (Daucus carota) in Danish grasslands.

Many crop species are able to hybridize with related weedy or wild relatives, which could lead to transfer of cultivar genes, and among them transgenes, into wild populations. It is not clear, however, whether the hybrids and their descendants are able to survive and reproduce in natural habitats, as inherited cultivar traits may be maladaptive under such conditions. To test this, we produced hybrid (F(1)) seeds by controlled crosses between wild [see text for formula] and cultivated carrots (Daucus carota ssp. carota and ssp. sativa, respectively) and sowed them into three Danish grasslands of different age, in parallel with seeds of wild carrots. Replicate plots were sown in fall and spring. Survival and flowering of the emerging plants were monitored for the following three years. Both hybrid and wild carrots survived and flowered in highest frequency at a recently disturbed site, and much less at two older sites. Hybrids emerged in higher proportions than wild carrots in the first year and survived to similar or slightly lower frequencies at the end of the experiment. Hybrids flowered as frequently or slightly less frequently than wild plants, and developed fewer and smaller umbels. Despite a somewhat lower reproductive potential compared to wild carrots, first generation hybrids between cultivated and wild carrots are likely to survive and produce offspring in natural grasslands in Denmark. This, together with other studies, suggests that cultivar genes may transfer relatively easily into wild carrot populations.

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