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Systematics |
Department of Ecology & Biodiversity, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong, China
Received for publication May 10, 2004. Accepted for publication November 9, 2004.
| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: Bauhinia blakeana Bauhinia purpurea Bauhinia variegata cultivar Hong Kong hybridization ISSR pollination
| INTRODUCTION |
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By 1903, the tree in the Botanic Gardens was reported to be flowering profusely and persistently (Dunn, 1904
). The tree survived being blown over by a typhoon in 1906 (Dunn, 1907
) and was subsequently used to propagate new trees vegetatively over the next few years. Beginning in 1914, B. blakeana was extensively planted as an ornamental in various regions of Hong Kong (Tutcher, 1915
). There is therefore no evidence that B. blakeana originated more than once, and there is strong circumstantial evidence suggesting that all trees cultivated today originate from a single ancestor, grown in the Hong Kong Botanic Gardens.
The present study aims to determine the hybrid origin and the parentage of B. blakeana. A broad range of approaches are adopted, including: (1) analysis of morphological variation (both macromorphology of floral organs and pollen ultrastructure), (2) determination of flowering phenology at the single flower, individual tree and entire population levels, (3) identification of breeding systems using field-based controlled pollination experiments, (4) assessment of pollen viability in vitro, (5) observations of floral visitors and floral rewards, and (6) analysis of variation in intersimple sequence repeat (ISSR) markers.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Pollen ultrastructure was studied using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), without acetolysis. Standard SEM preparation techniques were employed, and specimens were examined using a Cambridge Stereoscan 440 SEM.
Floral phenology
The floral phenology of the three species was investigated to determine events and changes at the single flower, individual tree, and entire population levels. The flowering periods of populations were assessed over a 5-yr period (19972001). The timing and duration of flowering events in individual trees were measured by tagging 2050 unopened flower buds on three or more individuals of each species; observations were made daily prior to flower opening, and every 2 h during anthesis.
The onset and duration of stigmatic receptivity was determined in the field by immersing stigmas (of known age from the time of anthesis) in 3% hydrogen peroxide solution. The formation of gas bubbles on the stigmatic surface is due to the presence of the enzyme peroxidase, and indicates receptivity (Galen and Plowright, 1987
).
Breeding systems
A total of six different controlled pollination treatments were conducted (Dafni, 1992
) to determine the breeding system: (1) control flowers tagged and left to freely pollinate; (2) induced self-pollinationflowers bagged, emasculated, and artificially pollinated with self-pollen; (3) geitonogamyflowers bagged, emasculated, and artificially pollinated with pollen from another flower of the same individual; (4) artificial cross-pollinationflowers bagged, emasculated, and artificially pollinated with pollen from flowers of different individuals of the same genet; (5) natural cross-pollinationflowers emasculated, but neither bagged nor artificially pollinated; and (6) agamospermyflowers bagged and emasculated, but not artificially pollinated.
Pollen viability
Pollen viability was estimated by calculating pollen germination rates in vitro. Fresh pollen grains were collected from recently dehisced anthers, and incubated in 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25% sucrose solutions in 50% (w/v) H3BO3 and 50% (w/v) Ca(NO3)2 for 24 h at ambient temperatures (Dafni, 1992
). A total of 200 pollen grains of each species were assessed, and the germination rates calculated as a percentage.
Floral visitors and floral rewards
Extensive observations of the activities of floral visitors were undertaken during daylight hours (07001700 hours), supplemented with occasional night-time observations (18002200 hours). More detailed studies of the behavior of the floral visitors were achieved by videotaping 25 individuals of each species for 30-min periods over several days. The number of flowers observed on the tree and the number and types of floral visitors were recorded, with samples collected for subsequent identification. Visitation rates were calculated as NV/NF x NH, where NV = number of visits observed, NF = number of flowers observed, and NH = number of hours of observations (Dafni, 1992
). The microclimate around the flowers and ambient weather conditions were recorded during the observation periods using a digital psychrometer.
Nectar sugar composition was determined using a Dionex HPLC system (Dionex Corp., Sunnyvale, California, USA) fitted with a CarboPac PA-1 (4 x 250 mm) column, and a 10 µL sample loop, with 10 mM NaOH isocratic elution at 1 mL/min. An ED40 electrochemical detector fitted with a pulsed amperometric cell was used, and peaks were compared with authentic sugar standards.
Intersimple sequence repeat (ISSR) markers
A total of 28 accessions (eight of B. variegata, and 10 each of B. purpurea and B. blakeana) were studied from nine different roadside and park localities in Hong Kong (Table 1). The extent of sampling was constrained by the fact that all three taxa have been artificially planted in Hong Kong, and therefore natural populations do not occur locally. Voucher specimens have been deposited in the HKU herbarium.
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After optimization, standard reaction conditions were: reaction volumes of 25 µL, consisting of 0.25 µM primer, 1 x Taq polymerase buffer, 0.1 mM dNTPs, 1.25 U Taq DNA polymerase (Gibco BRL), 1.5 mM MgCl2, and 4 µL of DNA. Reaction tubes were transferred to a PTC-100 Programmable Thermal Cycler (MJ Research, Inc., Waltham, Massachusetts, USA) with the thermocycler program set for 5 min at 94°C; followed by 35 cycles of 30 s at 94°C, 45 s at 48°C, 2 min at 72°C, 7 min at 72°C, and 4°C indefinitely. PCR reactions were characterized on 1.5% agarose gels in 0.1 x TAE buffer. The gels were stained in ethidium bromide and banding patterns were captured for each gel using an image system (UVP Gel Documentation System; UVP Inc., Upland, California, USA) and interpreted manually. Fragment sizes were estimated based on a 1-kb ladder size standard (3000100 bp) (Gibco-BRL; now Invitrogen, Carlsbad, California, USA) and their sizes were used to assign loci for each primer; bands were scored as diallelic for each assigned locus (1 = present; 0 = absent).
The presenceabsence data matrix was analyzed with POPGENE (Yeh et al., 1997
). Nei's (1972)
genetic identity (I) between populations was computed at the species level, and dendrograms of Nei's genetic distances were constructed using the unweighted pair group method with arithmetic averages (UPGMA).
| RESULTS |
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Anthesis occurred between 1300 and 1500 hours in B. purpurea, 1600 and 1700 hours in B. blakeana, and 1500 and 1600 hours in B. variegata, with floral receptivity extending for 2472 h after opening in all three species. The anthers dehisced either just before the flowers opened (B. purpurea and B. variegata) or immediately afterwards (B. blakeana). The stigma was not receptive for the first ca. 24 h, during which phase the style was initially horizontal but subsequently descended slightly (Fig. 3), and the staminal filaments were curved upwards. As the stigma became receptive after ca. 24 h, the style gradually curved upwards and was elevated above the anthers (Fig. 4); during this phase both the stamens and the carpel were functional. Nectar production was initiated immediately after floral opening, with average accumulated volumes (± standard deviation, after 10 h) of 239 ± 44 µL in B. blakeana, 178 ± 28 µL in B. purpurea, and 187 ± 3 µL in B. variegata.
Breeding systems
Bauhinia blakeana failed to produce fruits under any of the treatments and was therefore totally sterile. All treatments except the test for agamospermy, however, resulted in fruit set in both B. purpurea and B. variegata (Table 3).
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Floral visitors and floral rewards
Bauhinia purpurea and B. variegata had several floral visitors in common (Table 4). Field observations revealed that B. purpurea and B. variegata were both primarily visited by honeybees (Apis cerana and A. mellifera) and to a lesser extent by bamboo carpenter bees (Xylocopa iridipennis) and the common mormon butterfly (Papilio polytes). Pollen was observed adhering to the bodies of these insects, indicating that they were likely to be effective pollinators. The nectar produced by all three species was sucrose dominated (66, 63, and 80% sucrose, respectively, for B. purpurea, B. blakeana, and B. variegata); this is typical of flowers visited by long-tongued bees, wasps and lepidopterans (Martìnez del Rio et al., 1992
; Perret et al., 2001
).
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| DISCUSSION |
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Phenotypic intermediacy is not evident, however, in many of the macromorphological floral characters assessed for B. blakeana: only four of the 20 characters studied are shown here to be statistically intermediate between the putative parents (Table 2). Most of the characters showing intermediacy are derived length/width ratios, and therefore reflect differences in shape rather than size. Inevitably, however, the demonstration of the presence of phenotypic intermediacy provides rather equivocal evidence for hybridization as there are many circumstances where hybridization occurs but intermediacy is not evident, including Mendelian inheritance of qualitative characters, and the occurrence of matrocliny, in which maternal traits are more likely to be exhibited in the offspring (Rieseberg and Ellstrand, 1993
; Rieseberg, 1995
).
The controlled pollination experiments conducted during the present research provide clear evidence that B. blakeana is completely sterile: no seeds were set after any of the six experimental treatments (Table 3). This is in marked contrast to both B. purpurea and B. variegata, which are shown to be capable of both autogamy and xenogamy. Similar evidence of reduced fertility is seen in the data presented for pollen viability. Reduced fertility is common in hybrids, although it is again rather equivocal evidence of hybridization.
The phenological data presented here indicates that the flowering periods of B. purpurea and B. variegata partially overlap both seasonally and temporally. The results of the controlled pollination experiments (Table 3) furthermore indicate that both putative parental species are xenogamous, although also capable of autogamy. The flower-level phenological data suggests that xenogamy is promoted by two factors: partial temporal separation of the staminate and pistillate functions within individual flowers (because the receptivity of the stigmas lags ca. 24 h behind anther dehiscence); and spatial separation between the stigmas and anthers resulting from the upward curving of the style. Similar results have been reported previously for B. purpurea by Reddi and Rao (1993)
. Analysis of floral visitors indicate that both B. purpurea and B. variegata are largely pollinated by the same range of bee and butterfly species (Table 4). The phenological, breeding system and floral visitation data therefore indicate that it is clearly feasible for B. purpurea and B. variegata to interbreed.
The ISSR data shows that the 10 B. blakeana accessions investigated have a fixed heterozygous genotype and are therefore genetic clones (Fig. 10). Significantly, the data furthermore indicates that the accessions are composed exclusively of alleles that are also found in either one or both of the putative parental species, B. purpurea and B. variegata (Table 5; Figs. 8, 9). Additive inheritance of alleles that are otherwise unique in the putative parental species is convincing evidence of hybridization. The absence of unique loci as observed in many studies of angiosperms (e.g., Gallez and Gottlieb, 1982
; Wang et al., 1994
; Barker et al., 1996
; Wolfe et al., 1998
) indicates that few mutations have occurred since the initial hybridization event, and that B. blakeana is therefore of relatively recent hybrid origin. This suggestion is supported by the published historical data: the naturally formed F1 hybrid of B. blakeana was first discovered in the 1880s, and because it is unlikely that Bauhinia trees are particularly long-lived (ca. 50 yr), it can be tentatively postulated that hybridization occurred 120170 years ago. It is also possible, however, that the discovery of species-specific markers is an artefact of the necessarily limited sampling, resulting from the absence of natural populations in Hong Kong.
The values of the genetic identities (Table 6) between B. blakeana and the parental species are high (0.556 with B. purpurea, and 0.674 with B. variegata). The slightly higher value with B. variegata is clearly due to the fact that B. blakeana shares 25 loci in the eight primers with this species, whereas only 18 loci are shared with B. purpurea. No definite conclusion can be drawn from this data, however, due to the limited number of ISSR primers used. The mean genetic identities previously reported for congeneric species vary between 0.67 (Gottlieb, 1981
) and ca. 0.75 (Crawford, 1983
; Trapnell et al., 2004
).
The causes of sterility in B. blakeana are rather obscure. Hybrid sterility may result from abnormal segregation at meiosis of either whole chromosomes or of blocks of genes contained in chromosomal segments. The chromosomes of the parental species cannot pair at all during meiosis if they are strongly differentiated, whereas pairing can occur if the parents of a hybrid are more closely related to each other. In the latter situation, pairing is imperfect, resulting in the segregation of the gametes to give abnormal combinations of genes due to differences in the arrangement and structure of genes on the chromosomes. Although B. blakeana shares the same diploid chromosome number as its parental species, the karyotypes have been shown to differ slightly (Sharma and Raju, 1968
): B. blakeana and B. purpurea both consist of six type "A" chromosomes (long, with a satellite at the distal end of the shorter arm) and 22 type "B" chromosomes (short, without any satellite), whereas B. variegata consists of four type "A" chromosomes and 24 type "B" chromosomes. The karyotype differences between the parental species may therefore explain the sterility of B. blakeana. It is also significant that B. blakeana is reported to possess a variable number of carmine-stainable structures (indicative of nuclei acids) in addition to the 14 bivalent chromosomes (Sharma and Raju, 1968
). These may be the result of an imbalance in the settled ratio of DNA and RNA in each cell.
Is Bauhinia blakeana a species?
Grant (1971)
enumerated seven different ways in which plant hybrids can become "stabilized" to form new entities that can be recognized as distinct species: (1) vegetative propagation, (2) agamospermy, (3) translocation heterozygosity, (4) unbalanced polyploidy, (5) amphidiploidy, (6) recombinational speciation, and (7) hybrid speciation.
Vegetative propagation occurs in B. blakeana, but only artificially, as a result of active horticultural practices such as grafting and rooting of cuttings: there is no evidence that B. blakeana is capable of self-propagating. The breeding system experiments reported here (Table 3) furthermore indicate that agamospermy does not occur; this is further corroborated by the absence of fruit formation and seed set in mature individuals of B. blakeana. Translocation heterozygosity and unbalanced polyploidy (collectively referred to as the heterogamic complex by Grant, 1971
) are rare mechanisms, involving, for example, the formation of multivalent rings of chromosomes (e.g., Oenothera). Amphidiploidy furthermore does not occur in B. blakeana, because all published chromosome number reports indicate that it shares the same diploid chromosome number (2n = 28) with the parental species (Sharma and Raju, 1968
; Husaini and Gill, 1985
; Yeh et al., 1986
; Choudhary and Choudhary, 1988
; Kumari and Bir, 1989
). Recombinational speciation and hybrid speciation (collectively referred to as the homoploid complex by Grant, 1971
) are also not applicable to B. blakeana, because they are characterized by sustained levels of sexuality, without reduced fertility.
It is therefore evident that although B. blakeana is a hybrid that has resulted from a cross (probably natural) between B. purpurea and B. variegata, it has only been perpetuated genetically by artificial horticultural practices: it is not capable of reproducing itself independently. It is therefore inappropriate to regard it as a distinct species and is better referred to as an artificially maintained cultivar. A new cultivar name is accordingly formally published here, replacing the previous specific binomial published by Dunn (1908)
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| FOOTNOTES |
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2 Author for correspondence (saunders{at}hkucc.hku.hk
) ![]()
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