Funding: UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) grant NE/D014166/1 (RJA).A new homoploid hybrid lineage needs to establish a degree of reproductive isolation from its parent species if it is to persist as an independent entity, but the role hybridization plays in this process is known in only a handful of cases. The homoploid hybrid ragwort species, Senecio squalidus (Oxford ragwort), originated following the introduction of hybrid plants to the UK approximately 320 years ago. The source of the hybrid plants was from a naturally occurring hybrid zone between S. aethnensis and S. chrysanthemifolius on Mount Etna, Sicily. Previous studies of the parent species found evidence for multiple incompatibility loci causing transmission ratio...
Background: Introgressive hybridisation is an evolutionary catalyst producing novel variants able to...
Polyploidy has played a major role in the origin of new plant species, probably because of the expan...
© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company. A...
A new homoploid hybrid lineage needs to establish a degree of reproductive isolation from its parent...
A new homoploid hybrid lineage needs to establish a degree of reproductive isolation from its parent...
A new homoploid hybrid lineage needs to establish a degree of reproductive isolation from its parent...
Hybridisation can lead to homoploid hybrid speciation, i.e., the origin of new species without chang...
Hybridisation can lead to homoploid hybrid speciation, i.e., the origin of new species without chang...
Hybridization is an important cause of abrupt speciation. Hybrid speciation without a change in ploi...
The role of hybridization between diversifying species has been the focus of a huge amount of recent...
Studies of hybridizing species can reveal much about the genetic basis and maintenance of species di...
Hybridization and its consequences have been of longstanding interest to evolutionary biologists. Da...
Hybridisation is a creative evolutionary force, increasing genomic diversity, and facilitating adapt...
Knowledge of the genetic basis of phenotypic divergence between species and how such divergence is c...
Interspecific hybridization is the process where closely related species mate and produce offspring ...
Background: Introgressive hybridisation is an evolutionary catalyst producing novel variants able to...
Polyploidy has played a major role in the origin of new plant species, probably because of the expan...
© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company. A...
A new homoploid hybrid lineage needs to establish a degree of reproductive isolation from its parent...
A new homoploid hybrid lineage needs to establish a degree of reproductive isolation from its parent...
A new homoploid hybrid lineage needs to establish a degree of reproductive isolation from its parent...
Hybridisation can lead to homoploid hybrid speciation, i.e., the origin of new species without chang...
Hybridisation can lead to homoploid hybrid speciation, i.e., the origin of new species without chang...
Hybridization is an important cause of abrupt speciation. Hybrid speciation without a change in ploi...
The role of hybridization between diversifying species has been the focus of a huge amount of recent...
Studies of hybridizing species can reveal much about the genetic basis and maintenance of species di...
Hybridization and its consequences have been of longstanding interest to evolutionary biologists. Da...
Hybridisation is a creative evolutionary force, increasing genomic diversity, and facilitating adapt...
Knowledge of the genetic basis of phenotypic divergence between species and how such divergence is c...
Interspecific hybridization is the process where closely related species mate and produce offspring ...
Background: Introgressive hybridisation is an evolutionary catalyst producing novel variants able to...
Polyploidy has played a major role in the origin of new plant species, probably because of the expan...
© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company. A...