Application of RAPDs to the critical taxonomy of the English endemic elm Ulmus plotii Druce

Citation
M. Coleman et al., Application of RAPDs to the critical taxonomy of the English endemic elm Ulmus plotii Druce, BOTAN J LIN, 133(3), 2000, pp. 241-262
Citations number
53
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
BOTANICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY
ISSN journal
00244074 → ACNP
Volume
133
Issue
3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
241 - 262
Database
ISI
SICI code
0024-4074(200007)133:3<241:AORTTC>2.0.ZU;2-P
Abstract
The taxonomy of the British elms is notoriously complicated and a satisfact ory consensus classification remains elusive. This taxonomic complexity app ears to be attributable to the reproductive biology of the species. Ulmus g labra Huds. reproduces sexually and its taxonomic status is widely (albeit not universally) accepted. In contrast, the suckering elms of the U. minor complex (U. minor Mill. emend. Richens sensu latissimo) rarely reproduce by seed in Britain. Instead they perpetuate predominantly by vegetative repro duction; arguments regarding their taxonomy are legion. We have used molecu lar markers (RAPDs) to investigate the amounts and partitioning of clonal d iversity and taxon inter-relationships in the British elms, focusing on a p articularly enigmatic suckering elm, U. plotii Druce. Our molecular data su ggest that all samples of U. plotii that precisely match the type descripti on are ramets of a single genet, the distribution of which is attributable to human planting, Morphologically similar samples, which have man) but not all of the U. plotii diagnostic characters, do not cluster with U. plotii when the RAPD data are analysed using principal coordinates analysis (PCO). Instead, they are scattered on the PCO plots throughout the broader range of variability of the Ci. minor complex. The implications of these results for the taxonomy of the British elms are discussed, and the need to combine knowledge of population structure with taxonomic pragmatism is emphasized. (C) 2000 The Linnean Society of London.