INVESTIGADORES
CARDO Maria Victoria
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
The evolutionary history of an invasive species: alligator weed, Alternanthera philoxeroides
Autor/es:
SOSA AJ; GREIZERSTEIN E; CARDO MV; TELESNICKI MC; JULIEN MH
Lugar:
La Grande Motte
Reunión:
Simposio; XII International Symposium on Biological Control of Weeds; 2007
Resumen:
The eco-evolutionary mechanisms of biological invasions are still not thoroughly understood. Alligator weed (Alternanthera philoxeroides (Martius) Gisebach: Amaranthaceae) is an amphibious plant native to South America and considered a weed in Australia and other countries. To identify the patterns and mechanisms that led to the success of its invasion, we assessed the morphologic and cytogenetic variability of 12 Argentinean populations and the cytogenetic variability of 9 Australian populations. We found differences in: leaf shape (width/length ratio) and stem architecture in the Argentinean populations; reproduction (sexual with regular meiosis in two Argentinean populations to completely asexual with irregular meiosis and low pollen viability in all other populations) and polyploid degree (tetraploids with sexual reproduction and seed production to hexaploids with or without sexual reproduction). We propose a hypothesis about the mechanism that drove alligator weed to form highly invasive hybrid populations with vegetative reproduction from diploid ancestors. We consider the implications for plant-herbivore interactions and biological control of this weed.