Rarer species are expected to show stronger geographic differentiation than more common species. However, if rare species hybridize with common species, differentiation may be quite similar between the two due to genetic admixing via backcrossing. We studied morphological differentiation of plants of 21 natural populations of the more common Carex flava, 16 of the less common Carex viridula and 6 of their hybrids from 27 sites in three climatically different regions, Estonia, Lowland Switzerland and Highland Switzerland. Univariate ANOVA and multivariate principal component analysis of 14 morphological characters, describing both vegetative and reproductive characters, allowed to clearly distinguish C. flava from C. viridula. Carex viridula...
Hybridization is frequent in the large and ecologically significant genus Carex (Cyperaceae). In fou...
Carex section Ceratocystis (Cyperaceae) is a group of recently evolved plant species, in which hybri...
Plants growing in high-mountain environments may share common morphological features through converg...
Rarer species are expected to show stronger geographic differentiation than more common species. How...
Rarer species are expected to show stronger geographic differentiation than more common species. How...
Regional genetic differentiation within species is often addressed in evolutionary ecology and conse...
Phenotypic variation may be genetically determined or reflect phenotypic plasticity. More common pla...
Phenotypic variation may be genetically determined or reflect phenotypic plasticity. More common pla...
Phenotypic variation may be genetically determined or reflect phenotypic plasticity. More common pla...
Regional genetic differentiation within species is often addressed in evolutionary ecology and conse...
<p><b><i>Background</i></b>: Variable habitat conditions contribute to morphological variability tha...
Allozyme and morphological differentiation patterns within the Carex flava complex in Fennoscandia w...
The taxonomy of Carex section Ammoglochin is complex due to the faint morphological species boundari...
Hybridization is frequent in the large and ecologically significant genus Carex (Cyperaceae). In fou...
Carexfiava L., a rare species in the British Isles, is currently only recognised from one extant pop...
Hybridization is frequent in the large and ecologically significant genus Carex (Cyperaceae). In fou...
Carex section Ceratocystis (Cyperaceae) is a group of recently evolved plant species, in which hybri...
Plants growing in high-mountain environments may share common morphological features through converg...
Rarer species are expected to show stronger geographic differentiation than more common species. How...
Rarer species are expected to show stronger geographic differentiation than more common species. How...
Regional genetic differentiation within species is often addressed in evolutionary ecology and conse...
Phenotypic variation may be genetically determined or reflect phenotypic plasticity. More common pla...
Phenotypic variation may be genetically determined or reflect phenotypic plasticity. More common pla...
Phenotypic variation may be genetically determined or reflect phenotypic plasticity. More common pla...
Regional genetic differentiation within species is often addressed in evolutionary ecology and conse...
<p><b><i>Background</i></b>: Variable habitat conditions contribute to morphological variability tha...
Allozyme and morphological differentiation patterns within the Carex flava complex in Fennoscandia w...
The taxonomy of Carex section Ammoglochin is complex due to the faint morphological species boundari...
Hybridization is frequent in the large and ecologically significant genus Carex (Cyperaceae). In fou...
Carexfiava L., a rare species in the British Isles, is currently only recognised from one extant pop...
Hybridization is frequent in the large and ecologically significant genus Carex (Cyperaceae). In fou...
Carex section Ceratocystis (Cyperaceae) is a group of recently evolved plant species, in which hybri...
Plants growing in high-mountain environments may share common morphological features through converg...