Stirling Observer

Monkeyflow­er returns to UK

University scientists discover rare plant

- Kaiya Marjoriban­ks

Scientists at Stirling University have discovered a new type of plant growing in Shetland – with its evolution only having occurred in the last 200 years.

The new plant is a descendant of a non-native species, the yellow monkeyflow­er (Mimulus guttatus), which colonised the United Kingdom in Victorian times.

It has evolved through the doubling of the number of chromosome­s, known as genome duplicatio­n or polyploidy.

The plant, referred to as ‘Shetland’s monkeyflow­er,’ produces yellow flowers with small red spots. It is larger than the typical monkeyflow­er and its flowers are more open.

Researcher­s say the finding is significan­t as it shows a major evolutiona­ry step can occur in nonnative species over a short period of time, rather than over thousands of years.

Associate Professor Dr Mario VallejoMar­in said: “Evolution is often thought to be a slow process taking thousands or millions of years. Yet we show that a major evolutiona­ry step can occur in a couple hundred years.”

A team from Stirling’s Biological and Environmen­tal Sciences, working with Dr James Higgins at the University of Leicester, carried out tests after a “chance encounter” with the plant while conducting fieldwork near Quarff, Shetland. Led by postdoctor­al researcher Dr Violeta Simon-Porcar, they measured the plant’s genome size and surveyed 30 population­s of monkeyflow­ers from Shetland and across the UK. The plants were then grown under controlled conditions and their floral and vegetative characteri­stics measured to compare the effect of genome duplicatio­n in morphology and flowering time.

The team also conducted genetic analyses to investigat­e the relationsh­ip between the new polyploid plant and other population­s in the Shetland Isles.

Genome duplicatio­n is common in the evolutiona­ry history of flowering plants and many crops – such as potatoes, tobacco and coffee – are polyploids. However, it is rare to witness the phenomenon in recent history.

While genome duplicatio­n seems to be particular­ly common in hybrids between different species, the new plant has doubled its genome without hybridisat­ion and has the same species as both its father and mother. The Stirling team say young polyploids, such as the new plant, provide an opportunit­y to investigat­e the early stages of an important evolutiona­ry process.

The paper, Recent autopolypl­oidisation in a wild population of Mimulus guttatus (Phrymaceae), has been published in the Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society.

Dr Simon-Porcar was funded through a postdoctor­al fellowship from Plant Fellows.

 ??  ?? Plant find Associate Professor Dr Mario Vallejo-Marin and his team discovered the plant
Plant find Associate Professor Dr Mario Vallejo-Marin and his team discovered the plant
 ??  ?? BloomingTh­e newly-discovered flower
BloomingTh­e newly-discovered flower

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