Apostasioideae jsou nejmenší, vývojově nejpůvodnější a současně nejméně prozkoumanou podčeledí vstavačovitých (Orchidaceae). Vyskytují se ve dvou rodech a 17 druzích v podrostu tropických lesů v jihovýchodní Asii. Od ostatních orchidejí se liší mj. specifickou květní morfologii a pylovými zrny nespojenými v brylky. Studium jaderného genomu ukázalo, že Apostasioideae mají jedny z nejmenších genomů mezi orchidejemi a jejich DNA je velice bohatá na adenin a thymin. Skupina je mimo svoji domovinu prakticky nepěstovatelná a chybí proto i ve velkých specializovaných sbírkách., Apostasioideae is the smallest, least specialized orchid subfamily, which is still largely unexplored. It encompasses 17 terrestrial species in two genera native to tropical rain forests of SE Asia. They differ from other orchids in their unique floral morphology and pollen shed in monads. Our flow cytometric analyses showed that apostasioids possess very small genomes with a considerable proportion of adenine and thymine. The lack of information stems at least partly from their extremely difficult cultivation outside native areas., and Jana Jersáková, Jan Ponert, Pavel Trávníček, Jan Suda.
The formation and maintenance of polyploids (via the development of various reproductive barriers) rank among the central questions of studies on polyploid evolution. However, the long time scale of most evolutionary processes makes the study of the dynamics of diploid-polyploid groups difficult. A suitable candidate for a targeted comparative study is Vicia cracca (Fabaceae), which in the late 1960s was subjected to a detailed cytotype screening in Central Europe. Re-sampling the original localities offers a unique opportunity to assess changes in the ploidy structure of the populations, which should reflect the cumulative effect of all the evolutionary forces acting on the plants. Using flow cytometry, the DNA ploidy levels of more than 6,500 individuals of V. cracca collected at 257 localities in Austria, the Czech Republic, Germany and the Slovak Republic were estimated. Three different cytotypes (2x, 3x and 4x) were detected. While tetraploids predominated in the western part of the area investigated (179 populations), the diploids had a more easterly distribution (62 populations). There is a secondary zone of cytotype contact near the boundary between the Czech and Slovak Republics. Sixteen populations (~6%) consisted of a mixture of 2x and 4x cytotypes. Triploids are very rare; only seven individuals were found in two otherwise diploid populations, indicating the existence of breeding barriers between diploids and tetraploids. The distribution of cytotypes is similar to that determined four decades ago using chromosome counts. Nevertheless, there are some discrepancies, namely the current absence of: (i) the diploid cytotype in southern Bohemia and (ii) the altitudinal segregation in the distribution of cytotypes, including two formerly recognized chromosomal races of diploids, perhaps a result of more representative sampling. Identical monoploid genome sizes (1Cx-values) of both the majority ploidy levels support an autopolyploid origin of the tetraploids.
The agamosporous and taxonomically critical Dryopteris affinis group was investigated as part of a cytogeographic and morphometric study of ferns in Central Europe. Material from 27 localities in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland and Austria was sampled and evaluated using both morphometric multivariate and karyological analyses. Chromosome counts and flow cytometric analyses revealed the existence of two distinct triploid taxa (2n = 123) of differing genome size, which correspond to D. borreri and D. cambrensis, and of a rare pentaploid hybrid (2n = 205) D. ×critica (D. borreri × D. filix-mas). Morphometric analyses confirmed a clear separation between both triploid taxa. New quantitative characters were selected based on a discriminant analyses, and a key for the identification of the species is presented.
DAPI and propidium iodide flow cytometry were used to determine the variation in genome size in 166 samples and of all taxa and ploidy levels of Fallopia section Reynoutria (knotweeds) recorded in the Czech Republic. Significant differences were detected in the amount of nuclear DNA, associated with the ploidy levels and taxonomic identity of the material. At each ploidy level, F. sachalinensis showed the lowest and F. japonica the highest fluorescence intensities. The fluorescence values for the hybridogenous F. ×bohemica were located in-between these two levels. In most cases, there was at least a four-percent gap in fluorescence values between the nearest neighbours belonging to a different taxon. Intraspecific variation in genome size was very low in all taxa except hexaploid F. ×bohemica; this could be due to the complex evolutionary history of this taxon. Our results indicate that the amount of nuclear DNA can be used as a reliable marker for the identification of homoploid knotweed species and their hybrids. Different evolutionary pathways for the origin of high polyploids and/or hybridogenous taxa are proposed based on genome size.
Over the last decade there has been a tremendous increase in the use of flow cytometry (FCM) in studies on the biosystematics, ecology and population biology of vascular plants. Most studies, however, address questions related to differences in genome copy number, while the value of FCM for studying homoploid plant groups has long been underestimated. This review summarizes recent advances in taxonomic and ecological research on homoploid plants that were made using FCM. A fairly constant amount of nuclear DNA within each evolutionary entity together with the often large differences between species means that genome size is a useful character for taxonomic decision-making. Regardless of the number of chromosomes, genome size can be used to delimit taxa at various taxonomic levels, resolve complex low-level taxonomies, assess the frequency of interspecific hybridization or infer evolutionary relationships in homoploid plant groups. In plant ecology and evolutionary biology, variation in genome size has been used for prediction purposes because genome size is associated with several phenotypic, physiological and/or ecological characteristics. It is likely that in the future the use ofFCM in studies on taxonomy, ecology and population biology of homoploid plants will increase both in scope and frequency. Flow cytometry alone, but especially in combination with other molecular and phenotypic approaches, promises advances in our understanding of the functional significance of variation in genome size in homoploid plants.
Kniha Jaroslava Meda Literární život ve stínu Mnichova (1938-1939) podle autora optikou literárního života představuje panorama dané doby, přičemž upíná pozornost zvláště k jeho dominantám, jako byla španělská občanská válka. Práce tvoří velmi dobře komponovaný celek, v němž personalistický důraz na osobnosti má svou protiváhu v akcentaci klíčových dobových myšlenek a proudů, česká tematika je interpretována na pozadí mezinárodním a literatura je vsazena do kontextů kulturních, společenských i teologických. Jaroslav Med v ní neposluhuje žádné ideologii ani apriorní tezi, ale je vnímavým vykladačem zauzlované doby., Jiří Trávníček, and Čtyři hlasy k jedné knize