Bryological fi eld surveys in Plitvička jezera National Park and adjacent areas (Slunjčica river and Vrhovinsko polje karst fi eld) carried out in 2012 and 2013 resulted in a list of 207 species (39 liverworts and 168 mosses). Two species are reported for the fi rst time from Croatia (Ephemerum minutissimum and Pohlia annotina). Six species are included in the Red data book of European bryophytes (Buxbaumia viridis, Dicranum viride, Hamatocaulis vernicosus, Anomodon rostratus, Rhynchostegiella tenuicaulis and Taxiphyllum densifolium). Th e fi rst three are listed in the Bern Convention and the EU Habitats and Species Directive as well; in addition, other species, especially Sphagnum spp. rare in SE Europe were also located in the area.
Molecular and morphological evolution of species may be decoupled which can lead to contrasting delimitation of taxonomic units based on morphological and genetic characters. The moss genus Sphagnum (peat mosses) provides a good example in which morphological and genetic characters often contradict each other. We investigated morphological and genetic variability within a highly polymorphic and taxonomically controversial species complex of the genus Sphagnum in order to reveal the ultimate causes of discordance between morphology and molecular evolution. Specifically, we aimed at addressing the following questions: (1) Are the three closely related European taxa (S. angustifolium, S. fallax, S. flexuosum) of the S. recurvum group morphologically and genetically distinct entities? (2) Are morphological and genetic groups concordant? (3) Is there any sign of hybridization among taxa that might complicate their morphological delimitation? We show that European specimens of the S. recurvum group form three distinct gene pools based on 11 polymorphic microsatellite markers. Individuals defined as morphotype “fallax” appear to be genetically clearly distinct from both morphotype “angustifolium” and “flexuosum”. However, for the latter two morphotypes, traditionally used morphological and genetic markers provide partly incongruent taxonomic delimitations. We show that in about 13% of the accessions 12 traditionally used morphological characters cannot fully distinguish the genetic groups revealed. Our genetic analysis also reveals that only a low proportion of the specimens (3%) is admixed suggesting that hybridization is unlikely to explain the taxonomical controversies observed. Therefore, we hypothesize that taxonomic controversies are likely due to the extreme phenotypic plasticity of morphological characters rather than to porous species boundaries.
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