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1 May 2005 PHYLETIC HOT SPOTS FOR B CHROMOSOMES IN ANGIOSPERMS
Donald A. Levin, Brian G. Palestis, R. Neil Jones, Robert Trivers
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Abstract

We determined whether supernumerary B chromosomes were nonrandomly distributed among major angiosperm lineages and among lineages within families, as well as the identity of lineages with unusually high B-chromosome frequencies (hot spots). The incidence of B chromosomes for each taxon was gathered from databases showing species with and without these chromosomes (among species with known chromosome numbers). Heterogeneity was found at all ranks above the species level. About 8% of monocots had B chromosomes versus 3% for eudicots; they were rare in nonmonocot basal angiosperms. Significant heterogeneity in B-chromosome frequency occurred among related orders, families within orders, and major taxa within families. There were many B-chromosome hot spots, including Liliales and Commelinales at the order level. At the family level, there was a trend suggesting that B-chromosome frequencies are positively correlated with genome size.

Donald A. Levin, Brian G. Palestis, R. Neil Jones, and Robert Trivers "PHYLETIC HOT SPOTS FOR B CHROMOSOMES IN ANGIOSPERMS," Evolution 59(5), 962-969, (1 May 2005). https://doi.org/10.1554/04-148
Received: 5 March 2004; Accepted: 24 February 2005; Published: 1 May 2005
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KEYWORDS
B chromosomes
chromosomal heterogeneity
eudicots
genome size
monocots
phylogeny
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