Authors
Loren H Rieseberg, Seung-Chul Kim, Rebecca A Randell, Kenneth D Whitney, Briana L Gross, Christian Lexer, Keith Clay
Publication date
2007/2
Journal
Genetica
Volume
129
Pages
149-165
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Description
Although invasive plant species often have a hybrid ancestry, unambiguous evidence that hybridization has stimulated the evolution of invasive behaviors has been difficult to come by. Here, we briefly review how hybridization might contribute to the colonization of novel habitats, range expansions, and invasiveness and then describe work on hybrid sunflowers that forges a direct link between hybridization and ecological divergence. We first discuss the invasion of Texas by the common sunflower and show that the introgression of chromosomal segments from a locally adapted species may have facilitated range expansion. We then present evidence that the colonization of sand dune, desert floor, and salt marsh habitats by three hybrid sunflower species was made possible by selection on extreme or “transgressive” phenotypes generated by hybridization. This body of work corroborates earlier claims …
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