intraspecies variation
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bradley C Posch ◽  
Julia Hammer ◽  
Owen K Atkin ◽  
Helen Bramley ◽  
Yong-Ling Ruan ◽  
...  

Heat-induced inhibition of photosynthesis is a key factor in declining wheat performance and yield. Variation in wheat heat tolerance can be characterised using the critical temperature (Tcrit) above which incipient damage to the photosynthetic machinery occurs. We investigated intraspecies variation and plasticity of wheat Tcrit under elevated temperature in field and controlled environment experiments. We also assessed whether intraspecies variation in wheat Tcrit mirrors patterns of global interspecies variation in heat tolerance reported for mostly wild, woody plants. In the field, wheat Tcrit varied through the course of a day, peaking at noon and lowest at sunrise, and increased as plants developed from heading to anthesis and grain filling. Under controlled temperature conditions, heat stress (36°C) was associated with a rapid rise in wheat Tcrit (i.e. within two hours of heat stress) that peaked after 3—4 days. These peaks in Tcrit indicate a physiological limitation to photosystem II heat tolerance. Analysis of a global dataset (comprising 183 Triticum and wild wheat (Aegilops) species) generated from the current study and a systematic literature review showed that wheat leaf Tcrit varied by up to 20°C (about two-thirds of reported global plant interspecies variation). However, unlike global patterns of interspecies Tcrit variation which has been linked to latitude of genotype origin, intraspecific variation in wheat Tcrit was unrelated to that. Yet, the observed genotypic variation and plasticity of wheat Tcrit suggests that this trait could be a useful tool for high-throughput phenotyping of wheat photosynthetic heat tolerance.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 2100
Author(s):  
Anne Watt ◽  
Neil Young ◽  
Ruth Haites ◽  
Kerry Dunse ◽  
Derek Russell ◽  
...  

Two distinct isolates of the facultative parasite, Tetrahymena rostrata were compared, identifying and utilising markers that are useful for studying clonal variation within the species were identified and utilised. The sequences of mitochondrial genomes and several nuclear genes were determined using Illumina short read sequencing. The two T. rostrata isolates had similar morphology. The linear mitogenomes had the gene content and organisation typical of the Tetrahymena genus, comprising 8 tRNA genes, 6 ribosomal RNA genes and 45 protein coding sequences (CDS), twenty-two of which had known function. The two isolates had nucleotide identity within common nuclear markers encoded within the histone H3 and H4 and small subunit ribosomal RNA genes and differed by only 2–4 nucleotides in a region of the characterised actin genes. Variation was observed in several mitochondrial genes and was used to determine intraspecies variation and may reflect the natural history of T. rostrata from different hosts or the geographic origins of the isolates.


mSystems ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Megan G. Behringer

Investigation of microbial communities has led to many advances in our understanding of ecosystem function, whether that ecosystem is a subglacial lake or the human gut. Within these communities, much emphasis has been placed on interspecific variation and between-species relationships.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arnaud Fertet ◽  
Stéfanie Graindorge ◽  
Sandrine Koechler ◽  
Gert-Jan de Boer ◽  
Emilie Guilloteau-Fonteny ◽  
...  

The involvement of the different Lactuca species in the domestication and diversification of cultivated lettuce is not totally understood. Lactuca serriola is considered as the direct ancestor and the closest relative to Lactuca sativa, while the other wild species that can be crossed with L. sativa, Lactuca virosa, and Lactuca saligna, would have just contributed to the latter diversification of cultivated typologies. To contribute to the study of Lactuca evolution, we assembled the mtDNA genomes of nine Lactuca spp. accessions, among them three from L. virosa, whose mtDNA had not been studied so far. Our results unveiled little to no intraspecies variation among Lactuca species, with the exception of L. serriola where the accessions we sequenced diverge significantly from the mtDNA of a L. serriola accession already reported. Furthermore, we found a remarkable phylogenetic closeness between the mtDNA of L. sativa and the mtDNA of L. virosa, contrasting to the L. serriola origin of the nuclear and plastidial genomes. These results suggest that a cross between L. virosa and the ancestor of cultivated lettuce is at the origin of the actual mitochondrial genome of L. sativa.


Author(s):  
E. A Zhuk

The analysis of growth, seed production and pest resistance was carried out in 24-year old clones from5 latitudinal, 4 longitudinal and 5 altitudinal ecotypes of Siberian stone pine in the clone archive. Northern and highaltitudinal ecotypes had the weakest growth, weak or absent seed production, and were also severely damaged bypests. The local ecotype had average growth and reproduction rates. Southern and mid-eastern ecotypes had intensivevegetative growth, abundant seed production and absolute resistance to pests. They had the optimal combination of traitsfor plantation cultivation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 52 (9) ◽  
pp. 950-957 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georg Haberer ◽  
Nadia Kamal ◽  
Eva Bauer ◽  
Heidrun Gundlach ◽  
Iris Fischer ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 313-318
Author(s):  
Nina Bulatova

This paper is a review of the rare phenomenon of chromosome intraspecies variation manifested in monobrachial homology series in the comprehensively investigated karyotype of the common shrew Sorex araneus Linnaeus, 1758 (Eulipotyphla, Mammalia). The detailed dataset on the account of this mammalian species was drawn from the recently published monograph by Searle et al. (2019) “Shrews, Chromosomes and Speciation”. The parallels to the law of homologous series in variation by Nikolai Vavilov are discussed.


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