The complex-heterozygotes of the subgenus Euoenothera which occur throughout North America can be classified into five phylogenetic groups on the basis of their cytogenetical and morphological characteristics. In one of these, the biennis group 1, a gametophytic incompatibility system has been demonstrated
Oenothera biennis L., the common evening-primrose, is a widespread weed of roadside and waste places commonly occuring on light sandy or gravelly soils where competition is limited. The species is native to North America and, although occurring in all 10 Canadian provinces, is more common in the east than in the west.
Allozyme inheritance and transmission genetics of 11 enzyme systems were determined in the permanent translocation heterozygotes Oenothera biennis, Oe. strigosa, and Oe. parviflora. Electrophoretic variation was examined first among 164 strains of structural heterozygotes. Allelic configurations were then judged from inheritance patterns in reciprocal F1 hybrids between each of 22 ring-forming strains and tester strains of the related bivalent-formers, Oe. hookeri and Oe. grandiflora. Allozymes are inherited as codominant markers, and, as dictated by the genetic system, within a strain individual allelic variants are generally transmitted through only one germ line. Of the 20 loci resolved, only eight are polymorphic in any species, and, within species, generally only two alleles are present at each polymorphic locus. Despite the relatively meager allelic array, each of the 22 strains whose chromosome complexes were characterized is genotypically unique. Generally, within taxa, alpha (egg) and beta (sperm) complexes differ in allele frequency at several polymorphic loci. Such variability is correlated with differences in the phylogenetic origins of complexes and not with differences in segmental arrangement within a group of related complexes.
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