INTROGRESSION BETWEEN TYPHA LATIFOLIA AND T. ANGUSTIFOLIA
@article{Fassett1952INTROGRESSIONBT, title={INTROGRESSION BETWEEN TYPHA LATIFOLIA AND T. ANGUSTIFOLIA}, author={Norman C. Fassett and Barbara Calhoun}, journal={Evolution}, year={1952}, volume={6} }
Throughout much of their range in the northern United States and southern Canada, T. latifolia and T. angustifolia occupy the same regions; many colonies consist of both species, in company with individuals combining characteristics of the two. In many colonies that apparently consist of but one species, some individuals show characteristics of the other species. The cat-tails of the United States have been referred to four species, T. latifolia L., T. angustifolia L., T. glauca Godr. and T…
26 Citations
COMPARISON OF ISOZYMES AMONG TYPHA SPECIES IN THE EASTERN UNITED STATES
- Environmental Science
- 1980
Biochemical phenotypes of four taxa of Typha from the eastern United States were determined by starch gel electrophoresis. The isozyme banding patterns of T. latifolia, T. angustifolia and T.…
Synchronous flowering times and asymmetrical hybridization in Typha latifolia and T. angustifolia in northeastern North America
- Environmental Science
- 2013
An examination of hybridization between the cattail species Typha latifolia and Typha angustifolia using random amplified polymorphic DNA and chloroplast DNA markers
- Environmental ScienceMolecular ecology
- 1999
The results suggest that hybridization between the native and introduced Typha species has impacted the native population through the spread of the F1 hybrid, T. glauca, and that extensive gene flow between T. latifolia and T. angustifolia is unlikely.
Salt tolerance within a Typha population.
- Environmental Science
- 1959
Typha in a disturbed salt flat near Lincoln, Nebraska, provided material for an examination of population dynamics and results indicated greatest salt tolerance by T. angustifolia and least salt toleranceBy T. latifolia.
Genetic and clonal diversity of two cattail species, Typha latifolia and T. angustifolia (Typhaceae), from Ukraine.
- Environmental Science, BiologyAmerican journal of botany
- 2005
Correlations between clonal and genetic diversity were higher for T. latifolia than T. angustifolia, suggesting that the importance of factors and their interactions affecting this relationship are different for the two species.
Morphological analysis of genetically identified cattails Typha latifolia, Typha angustifolia, and Typha ×glauca
- Biology
- 1999
Discriminant analysis of morphological characters can be used to distinguish the hybrid cattail from the parental species with reasonable confidence when molecular resources are not available.
Analysis of pollen proteins of Typha species in relation to identification of hybrids
- Environmental Science
- 1979
Invasiveness in wetland plants in temperate North America
- Environmental ScienceWetlands
- 2009
A review of published literature found few studies that compare the growth and dynamics of invasive populations in their new range versus those in historic ranges, but there is evidence that hydrologic alterations could facilitate invasions by Typha × glauca and Phalaris arundinacea and that increased salinity promoted spread of Typha angustifolia.
A TAXONOMIC STUDY OF WESTERN CANADIAN SPECIES IN THE GENUS BETULA
- Biology
- 1966
Five western North American birches, Betula fontinalis, B. glandulosa, B. glandulifera, B. resinifera, and B. papyrifera, are studied taxonomically. Four hybrids, B. × winteri, B. × sargentii, B. ×…
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