Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
29 January 2024 An unexpected occurrence of Alyssum rossetii (Brassicaceae) in the Pyrenees, a new species for the Spanish flora
Stanislav Španiel, Lenka Mártonfiová, Judita Zozomová-Lihová
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Alyssum rossetii is recorded for the first time in Spain from a single locality in the Pyrenees. After the type locality in the Valpelline valley (Pennine Alps, Italy), it is only the second known locality of this species. Morphology, diploid chromosome number (2n = 16), relative genome size, and ITS sequences confirm that the Pyrenean plants are conspecific with the Alpine ones and should be classified as A. rossetii. Phylogenetic analyses placed A. rossetii within the clade of A. sect. Gamosepalum comprising species from Turkey and demonstrated that A. rossetii is only distantly related to other Alyssum species occurring in the Pyrenees and adjacent regions: A. alyssoides, A. cacuminum, A. collinum, A. fastigiatum, A. granatense, A. montanum, and A. simplex. An identification key to all Alyssum species known from the Pyrenees is presented.

Citation: Š aniel S Mártonfiová L & Zozomová-Lihová J 2024: An unex ected occurrence of Al ssum rossetii (Brassicaceae) in the Pyrenees, a new species for the Spanish flora. – Willdenowia 53: 297–307

Version of record first published online on 29 January 2024.

Introduction

The genus Alyssum L. includes about 114 species distributed mainly in Eurasia (Španiel & al. 2015). They are divided into two main phylogenetic clades (Flynn 2013; Rešetnik & al. 2013; Li & al. 2015; Cetlová & al. 2021). One of them includes almost all annual species and a nested monophyletic group of perennials belonging to the A. montanum–A. repens species complex with the centre of diversity in southern Europe (Zozomová-Lihová & al. 2014; Španiel & al. 2011b, 2017a, 2017b). The other of the two clades includes two annual taxa (A. dasycarpum Stephan ex Willd. and A. macropodum Boiss. & Balansa) and perennials, most of which were formerly classified in A. sect. Gamosepalum (Hausskn.) T. R. Dudley (hereafter referred to as the Gamosepalum lineage) and occur mainly in Asia. The Gamosepalum lineage comprises only a few taxa that occur in eastern Europe (e.g. A. doerfleri Degen, A. lenense Adams, A. pulvinare Velen., A. tayge-teum Heldr.), including one (A. doerfleri) that was also recently discovered in southern Italy (Bernardo & al. 2018).

Alyssum rossetii Španiel & al. is a recently discovered and described perennial species known from a single site in the Valpelline valley (Pennine Alps, Italy) (Španiel & al. 2018b). The population is relatively small and until now no other localities have been recorded. Recent molecular studies revealed that it belongs to the Gamosepalum lineage (Španiel & al. 2023a, 2023b) and is phylogenetically placed closest to A. aurantiacum Boiss., A. misirdalianum Orcan & Binzet and A. praecox Boiss., all species known only from Turkey (Španiel & al. 2023a). The origin of such a large geographic disjunction (Alps versus Anatolia) is not clear. It might be a consequence of colonization events from Anatolia via the Balkans during glacial periods followed by range fragmentation and extinction in the intervening areas or a rare case of recent (Pleistocene) long-distance dispersal (Španiel & al. 2023a). All other perennial Alyssum species that occur in southwestern Europe belong to the A. montanumA. repens complex. Alyssum rossetii differs from this species complex by a larger genome size and several morphological characters (Španiel & al. 2018b).

During a field trip in the Pyrenees in 2022, taxonomically unidentified plants resembling Alyssum rossetii were discovered by one of the authors on a rocky slope between Pic de Qüenca and Rocablanca near Alós d'Isil. The site is 620 km distant from the only known (and type) locality of A. rossetii in the Alps. According to available distribution data (Anthos 2023) and the most recent taxonomic treatments (Zozomová-Lihová & al. 2014; Španiel & al. 2015; Cetlová & al. 2019), seven species of Alyssum have been reported so far from the Pyrenees and adjacent regions. Four of these species are annual herbs: A. alyssoides (L.) L., A. collinum Brot., A. granatense Boiss. & Reut. and A. simplex Rudolphi. The other three taxa are perennial and belong to the A. montanumA. repens complex: A. cacuminum Španiel & al., A. fastigiatum Heywood and A. montanum L. (Zozomová-Lihová & al. 2014). Alyssum cacuminum is endemic to the Pyrenees. Its populations were previously recognized under the name A. cuneifolium Ten., but recent studies revealed that this Apennine endemic is genetically and morphologically clearly different from the Pyrenean and Balkan plants for which this name was previously used (Zozomová-Lihová & al. 2014; Španiel & al. 2019). Alyssum fastigiatum was originally described as an endemic of Sierra de Cazorla, but molecular as well as morphological studies revealed that this name should be applied to all Iberian populations previously treated as A. montanum (Zozomová-Lihová & al. 2014; Španiel & al. 2023b). Several other taxa formerly considered members of Alyssum but recently reassigned to other genera (Španiel & al. 2015; Salmerón-Sánchez & al. 2018) also occur in the Pyrenees (Jalas & al. 1996): Hormathophylla lapey-rouseana (Jord.) P. Küpfer, H. pyrenaica (Lapeyr.) Cullen & T. R. Dudley, H. spinosa (L.) P. Küpfer and Odontarrhena serpyllifolia (Desf.) Jord. & Fourr. (in the Pyrenees treated as O. alpestris (L.) Ledeb. or A. alpestre L. by some authors, e.g. Küpfer & Nieto Feliner 1993).

Fig. 1.

Alyssum rossetii in the Pyrenees, Spain (A, C, E) and in the Pennine Alps, Italy (B, D). – A: fruiting plant at locality 684PQU between Pic de Qüenca and Rocablanca, 25 Jul 2022; B: flowering plant at locality 560FEU between La Tsa and Pas des Feuilles, 10 Jun 2017; C: habitat at locality 684PQU between Pic de Qüenca and Rocablanca, 25 Jul 2022; D: trichome on lower surface of stem leaves; E: metaphase mitotic cell with chromosome number 2n = 16. – Photographs by S. Španiel (A, B, C); voucher specimens (D, E) deposited in SAV; scale bars: D = 50 µm; E = 10 µm.

img-z2-1_297.jpg

The aim of the present study is to clarify the taxonomic identity of the Pyrenean plants resembling Alyssum rossetii by inspecting genetic, karyological and morphological variability. More specifically, we aimed to (1) inspect their phylogenetic and morphological affinity to the Alpine A. rossetii and other relevant taxa of Alyssum, (2) determine their chromosome number and relative genome size, and (3) establish an identification key to Alyssum species occurring in the Pyrenees and adjacent areas.

Material and methods

Plant material

Several plants morphologically resembling Alyssum rossetii were sampled in July 2022 at the locality between Pic de Qüenca and Rocablanca near Alós d'Isil in the province of Lleida in the Pyrenees (684PQU, Fig. 1 and Appendix 1). They were used for phylogenetic analyses (ITS of nrDNA), genome size measurements (by flow cytometry), chromosome counting and morphological comparisons. Five living individuals were transferred to the Botanical Garden of P. J. Šafárik University in Košice and kept there until the anthesis in April 2023 (Fig. 2). Phylogenetic analyses and morphological evaluation included A. rossetii from the type locality in the Alps, and other perennial Alyssum species (A. cacuminum, A. fastigiatum, A. montanum) and annual species (A. alyssoides, A. collinum, A. granatense and A. simplex) previously reported from the Pyrenees and adjacent regions (Appendix 1). In addition, three species of the Gamosepalum lineage from Turkey, previously resolved as closest to A. rossetii (Španiel & al. 2023a), and Odontarrhena muralis (Waldst. & Kit.) Endl. and O. tortuosa (Waldst. & Kit. ex Willd.) C. A. Mey. (both as outgroups) were also included in the phylogenetic inferences. ITS sequences of nrDNA were generated for the present study or taken from GenBank and published studies (Appendix 1).

In contrast, Alyssum taxa occurring in France and Spain but neither in the Pyrenees nor in their foothills (annual A. minutum Schltdl. ex DC., perennial A. flexi-caule Jord., A. gallaecicum (S. Ortiz) Španiel, Marhold & Lihová, A. loiseleurii P. Fourn., A. orophilum Jord. & Fourr., and A. rhodanense Jord. & Fourr.) were not included in the present study. Their phylogenetic relationships and morphological variation were analysed and discussed in detail in previous studies (Zozomová-Lihová & al. 2014; Španiel & al. 2019; Cetlová & al. 2021).

Chromosome counting and flow cytometry

Chromosome numbers were determined in mitotic metaphases of root tip cells. The root tips were taken from two adult plants identified as Alyssum rossetii collected at the locality 684PQU (Appendix 1) in the Pyrenees and kept in the Botanical Garden of P. J. Šafárik University in Košice. The root tips were pre-treated in a 0.002 M aqueous solution of 8-hydroxyquinoline for approximately 18 hours at 4° C, fixed in a mixture of 96 % ethanol and 98 % acetic acid (3:1) for 1–24 hours at 4° C, and macerated in 1-N HCl at 60° C for 6 min. Between each step, the root tips were washed in distilled water. Permanent squashes were prepared using the cellophane square method (Murín 1960) and stained in a 7 % Giemsa stock solution in Sørensen phosphate buffer for 1 h. The squashes were washed with distilled water, dried and observed in a drop of immersion oil using a Leica DM 1000 microscope equipped with HDCE-X5 camera and ScopeImage 9.0 software.

Flow cytometry using the AT-selective fluorochrome DAPI was employed to determine the relative genome size and ploidy level of six plants sampled in situ at the locality 684PQU in the Pyrenees, including the same individuals used for chromosome counting. Solanum lycoper-sicum L. “Stupické polní rané” (2C = 1.96 pg; Doležel & al. 1992) was used as an internal standard. The analyses were performed using a Partec Cyflow ML instrument equipped with an HBO-100 mercury arc lamp (Partec, Münster, Germany) at the Plant Science and Biodiversity Centre of the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Bratislava following the protocol described in Španiel & al. (2011a).

Ploidy levels of the other species were known from previous studies (Španiel & al. 2010, 2011a, 2018a, 2018b; Zozomová-Lihová & al. 2014; Cetlová & al. 2021; Appendix 1).

Phylogenetic analyses

The ITS region of nrDNA was amplified using the universal primers ITS4 and ITS5 (White & al. 1990) following the protocol of Melichárková & al. (2019). Purified PCR products were either sequenced directly or cloned if intraindividual polymorphisms were detected after direct sequencing, indicating the presence of multiple ITS copy variants within a genome. Molecular cloning was performed as described in Melichárková & al. (2017). Sequencing was carried out at Eurofins Genomics (Konstanz, Germany). The ITS sequences were edited and aligned in Geneious software v. R10.2.6 (Biomatters Ltd, Auckland, New Zealand). Two data partitions (for the non-coding ITS1+ITS2 and the coding 5.8S regions) were defined and the best-fit models of nucleotide substitutions were assessed separately for each of them in jModelTest version 2.1.10 (Darriba & al. 2012) using the Akaike information criterion. The phylogenetic tree was constructed using maximum-likelihood (ML) inference in GARLI v. 2.01 (Zwickl 2006) run at the CIPRES Science Gateway (Miller & al. 2010). Settings for ML phylogenetic computations followed Melichárková & al. (2017). All newly generated ITS sequences were submitted to GenBank (accession numbers OR016717–OR016761; Appendix 1).

Fig. 2.

Alyssum rossetii from the Pyrenees in cultivation. – A: flowering plant; B: inflorescence. – Slovakia, Košice, Botanical Garden of P. J. Šafárik University, 28 Apr 2023, photographs by L. Mártonfiová; voucher specimens deposited in SAV.

img-z4-1_297.jpg

Study of morphology and examination of herbaria

Morphology of the Pyrenean plants resembling Alyssum rossetii was evaluated on the basis of samples collected in situ and five ex situ flowering individuals in the Botanical Garden of P. J. Šafárik University in Košice. The examined morphological characters include those that unambiguously differentiate A. rossetii from taxa of the A. montanumA. repens group and were identified in the previous study (Španiel & al. 2018b): presence/absence and shape of wings and teeth on the four inner (longer) filaments of stamens, presence/absence of purplish coloration on sepals, length of trichome rays of stellate trichomes on the lower surface of middle stem leaves and density (number per 0.5 mm2) of stellate trichomes on the lower and upper surface of middle stem leaves. Due to the small number of investigated individuals and the ex situ origin of the flowers, we did not carry out a thorough multivariate morphometric comparison of the Pyrenean and Alpine plants of A. rossetii. Values of morphological characters of almost all other taxa except A. alyssoides and A. granatense, were taken from previous studies (Zozomová-Lihová & al. 2014; Cetlová & al. 2019). For the latter two species, several individuals from the populations listed in Appendix 1 were examined (characters on fruits). Characters of indumentum on leaves and silicules were observed and measured using a stereomicroscope (Olympus SZ61) at magnification 80× and QuickPHOTO Micro 3.2 software. The photo of the trichome of A. rossetii was taken using a scanning electron microscope (JEOL JSM-6390LV) at the Geological Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Banská Bystrica.

In order to find other potential localities of plants similar to Alyssum rossetii in the Pyrenees, we examined herbarium collections in BC, BCN and MA.

Results

Chromosome number, ploidy level and relative genome size

A diploid chromosome number (2n = 16) was determined in two plants of Alyssum rossetii from the locality 684PQU in the Pyrenees (Fig. 1). The total relative genome size (2C) of these two and additional four individuals was 0.916 ± 0.005 which corresponds to the monoploid relative genome size (Cx) of 0.458 ± 0.002 (mean ± standard deviation in arbitrary units).

Phylogenetic analyses

The ITS alignment included 107 sequences from 48 individuals and was 629 bp long. It comprised 134 variable sites and a total of 62 different sequence variants (ribotypes) were identified. Intragenomic variation was frequently observed, within both diploid and polyploid accessions, with up to seven different ribotypes detected per individual. In contrast, all four analysed individuals of Alyssum rossetii from the Alps (560FEU) had a single ribotype that was identical to that found in the plants from the Pyrenees (four individuals from 684PQU). In the ML tree (Fig. 3), the ribotype of A. rossetii was placed in the Gamosepalum lineage, which was clearly distinct from the clade comprising the other Alyssum species studied: annuals and the nested perennial A. montanumA. repens complex, in congruence with the known phylogeny of the genus (see Introduction).

Fig. 3.

Maximum-likelihood (ML) tree based on ITS sequence data of studied Alyssum taxa. Population codes follow Appendix 1. Bootstrap support values (> 50%) are indicated.

img-z5-1_297.jpg

Morphology and herbarium data

Individuals found in the Pyrenees (684PQU), tentatively identified as Alyssum rossetii, have green sepals with a darker coloration at the apex, however not as dark and purplish as in the plants from the type locality of A. rossetii. Wings and teeth on the four inner (longer) filaments of stamens are only slightly developed or absent (same as in the plants from the type locality of A. rossetii). Lower surface of middle stem leaves is covered by 31–45 stellate trichomes per 0.5 mm2 with rays 0.11–0.13 mm long; upper surface of middle stem leaves is covered by 20–31 stellate trichomes per 0.5 mm2. These values are within the range of those previously measured in plants from the type locality of A. rossetii. On the other hand, individuals of A. rossetii, considering plants from both the Pyrenees and Alps, clearly differ from other perennial or annual species growing in the Pyrenees and adjacent regions, as presented in the Identification key below.

We found no herbarium specimens from the Pyrenees morphologically similar to Alyssum rossetii in the herbarium collections of BC, BCN and MA, and no earlier collections from the locality of 684PQU studied here.

Identification key of Alyssum species occurring in the Pyrenees and adjacent regions

The value ranges of the quantitative characters represent the 5th and 95th percentiles; asterisks (*) indicate mean values of three random counts per leaf surface or silicule valve. Indumentum of leaves should be inspected on leaves placed in a middle part of flowering stems, not on non-flowering shoots (therefore the term “middle stem leaf” is used throughout the key). Overall geographic ranges and habitats of species are reported according to Maire (1967), Küpfer & Nieto Feliner (1993), Jalas & al. (1996), Zozomová-Lihová & al. (2014), Španiel & al. (2018b) and Cetlová & al. (2019, 2021).

1. Annual plants, without non-flowering shoots 2

– Perennial plants, with several or many non-flowering shoots 5

2. Sepals persistent until fruits are fully ripe (falling of only after fruits are ripe, straw-brown and dry) 3

– Sepals caducous before fruits are ripe (falling of when fruits are still green and not full-grown) 4

3. Silicules orbicular, but slightly longer than wide, with a monomorphic indumentum of ± symmetrical stellate trichomes with longest rays 0.15–0.20* mm long (Europe, North Africa, Asia; steppes, rocky slopes, quarries, disturbed ground, pastures, roadsides) A. alyssoides

– Silicules orbicular, but slightly wider than long, with a dimorphic indumentum with strigose trichomes (bifurcate or strongly asymmetrical stellate trichomes) with some rays conspicuously thick and elongated up to 0.75* mm in addition to ± symmetrical stellate trichomes with longest rays 0.15–0.20* mm long (Spain, Portugal, North Africa; gravelly pastures, open disturbed ground, roadsides) A. granatense

4. Style glabrous or with only 1–3 stellate trichomes at base, with long patent rays. Silicules with a dimorphic indumentum with strigose trichomes (bifurcate or strongly asymmetrical stellate trichomes with some rays thick and elongated) in addition to ± symmetrical stellate trichomes; longest rays of (strigose) trichomes on silicule valves 0.28–0.43* mm long (Spain, Portugal, North Africa; pastures, steppes, open dry sites, cultivated areas, roadsides, gravel, screes, rocks, sand) A. collinum

–Style hairy with 4–19 stellate trichomes all along style, with short adpressed rays. Silicules with a monomorphic indumentum of ± symmetrical stellate trichomes; longest rays of (stellate) trichomes on silicule valves 0.19–0.27* mm long (western Europe: France, Italy, Portugal, Spain; eastern Europe: Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Greece, Montenegro, Ukraine; western Asia: Turkey; pastures, open ground, rocky and gravelly slopes) A. simplex

5. Wings and teeth on four inner (longer) filaments of stamens missing or only slightly developed; sepals purplish or green with a purplish coloration at least at apex; lower surface of middle stem leaves covered by 28–42 stellate trichomes per 0.5 mm2 with rays 0.11–0.15 mm long; upper surface of middle stem leaves covered by 20–32 stellate trichomes per 0.5 mm2 (Spain: Pyrenees, Italy: Pennine Alps; alpine rocks and dry grasslands) A. rossetii

–Wings and teeth on four inner (longer) filaments of stamens pronounced and well-developed; sepals yellowish to light green without major purplish coloration; lower surface of middle stem leaves covered by 3–23 stellate trichomes per 0.5 mm2 with rays 0.20–0.47 mm long; upper surface of middle stem leaves covered by 3–13 stellate trichomes per 0.5 mm2 6

6. Silicules broadly elliptic; fruiting racemes mostly congested, umbel-like; stems mostly flexuous, slightly distorted in basal procumbent part; 8th stem leaf (counted downward) 2–4 times longer than wide (France and Spain: Pyrenees; alpine screes, rocks and dry grasslands; individuals of A. fastigiatum from Tozal de Guara in Pyrenees are very similar to this species) A. cacuminum

– Silicules suborbicular; fruiting racemes mostly not congested, elongated; stems mostly straight, firm, and ascending in basal part; 8th stem leaf (counted downward) 3.5–8 times longer than wide 7

7. Upper surface of middle stem leaf green and contrastingly less hairy than lower surface, lower surface of middle stem leaf densely hairy, usually silvery-white and entirely covered by stellate trichomes, leaf epidermis often invisible underneath layer of trichomes, 14–27 trichomes per 0.5 mm2 area with 16–27* rays 0.18–0.30 mm long (SW Germany, France, W Switzerland, not found in Spain; rocks, dry grassland, inland sand in lowlands and mountains, rarely sub-alpine pastures) A. montanum

– Upper surface of middle stem leaf of similar colour and indumentum as lower surface, lower surface of middle stem leaf sparsely to densely hairy, green, greyish green, rarely silvery-white, rarely entirely covered by trichomes, leaf epidermis usually at least partly visible underneath layer of trichomes, 3–15 trichomes per 0.5 mm2 area with 8–20* rays 0.29–0.48 mm long (Spain, not found in France; montane to alpine dry grasslands, rocks and pastures; plants from Sierra de Mijas in southern Spain are a bit different, with leaves silvery-white and densely pubescent on both sides) A. fastigiatum

Discussion

All data presented here, which include genome size values, morphological characters, and ITS sequences, are congruent and demonstrate that the Pyrenean plants growing between Pic de Qüenca and Rocablanca (684PQU) are conspecific with the population in the Valpelline valley (560FEU) in the Pennine Alps and should be classified as Alyssum rossetii. In concordance with previous phylogenetic inferences (Španiel & al. 2023a), A. rossetii is placed within the Gamosepalum lineage and is therefore phylogenetically distant from all other Alyssum species that occur both in the Pyrenees and in the Alps and adjacent regions. Previous studies on Alyssum have shown that the ITS region of nrDNA generally provides sufficient resolution to distinguish different species, that it often exhibits some intraspecific variation, and that intra-individual variation with multiple copy variants is also common (Melichárková & al. 2019; Cetlová & al. 2021; Španiel & al. 2023a), which is also demonstrated in the here presented results. Here, the species selection comprises both diploid and polyploid species, the latter including proven allopolyploids (see Cetlová & al. 2021; Španiel & al. 2023b), in which either homogenized ITS sequences toward one of the progenitors (A. granatense, A. alyssoides and A. collinum, Cetlová & al. 2021) or different parental copies were observed (A. cacuminum, present results). In A. rossetii, on the other hand, no variation in ITS sequences was detected either within the populations or between the two distant populations from the Alps and the Pyrenees. Species of the Gamosepalum lineage have rare and scattered occurrence in Europe and may represent relicts (discussed in Španiel & al. 2023b), whereas the centre of distribution and species diversity is in Asia (Irano-Turanian region). However, genetic variation patterns and phylogenetic relationships are poorly known in the Gamosepalum lineage (Rešetnik & al. 2013; Li & al. 2015). Further studies employing high-resolution genetic markers will be needed to understand the evolution and biogeographic history of the Gamosepalum lineage, to explain the lack of genetic variation within A. rossetii, its extreme disjunction, as well as the scattered occurrence of other species in Europe.

All investigated morphological characters of the plants from the locality 684PQU in the Pyrenees, preliminarily identified as Alyssum rossetii, were within the range of morphological variation previously detected in plants from the type locality of A. rossetii from the Pennine Alps (560FEU; Španiel & al. 2018b). The only exception is the dark coloration at the apex of sepals, which was not as pronounced and purplish as in the plants from the type locality. Nevertheless, this difference may be caused by their cultivation in the botanical garden. We assume that the darker coloration is more pronounced in situ (as observed in the plants from the Alps) due to high elevation and more intense sunlight. Plants in situ in the Alps and Pyrenees grow under direct sunlight in 2200–2320 m a.s.l. and flower in mid-June. In contrast, the investigated individuals were kept in the botanical garden in 250 m a.s.l. in partial shade and flowered in April.

Alyssum rossetii occurs at the type locality in the Pennine Alps at a single high-mountain site between La Tsa and Pas des Feuilles (population 560FEU). It grows on a steep south-facing slope in a subalpine-alpine grassland, especially on microsites with open soil and sparse vegetation along a footpath, but also in juniper bushes and in clumps with other alpine plants which include several calcicolous species. The bedrock in this region consists of the dominant paragneiss (kinzigits) with numerous small outcrops of calcareous rocks – ancient silicate-rich marbles (Španiel & al. 2018b). The habitat of A. rossetii in the Pyrenees between Pic de Qüenca and Rocablanca (684PQU) is similar. Here, plants of A. rossetii grow on south-facing rocky slopes on microsites with sparse vegetation and open soil, but also directly in rock crevices. The bedrock in this area consists of limestone, slate and siltstone (Sanz López & Palau Ramírez 1996). The Pyrenean population of A. rossetii is of similar size (few dozens individuals) to the Alpine population and occupies a relatively small area of approximately 100 m2. The thorough research of herbarium specimens of Alyssum from the Pyrenees in the collections of BC, BCN and MAD revealed no other localities of this species. A detailed investigation in the broader surroundings of the locality has not yet been carried out. It should be noted that a distantly related Odontarrhena serpyllifolia (previously treated under Alyssum) grows only a few metres from the site of A. rossetii, but at first glance differs from A. rossetii by compound inflorescences.

Author contributions

S.Š. conceived the study, carried out the fieldwork, flowcytometric and morphological analyses and prepared the identification key, S.Š. and J.Z.L. carried out the molecular laboratory work and wrote the manuscript, J.Z.L. performed molecular analyses, L.M. counted chromosomes.

Acknowledgements

This work was funded by the Slovak Research and Development Agency (APVV; Grant No. APVV-21-0044), the Grant Agency VEGA, Bratislava, Slovakia (Grant No. 2/0022/21) and the Turkish-Slovak joint research project JRP [SAS—TUBITAK no. 475542 (ELTtoEFDi)]. The authors would like to thank to colleagues who provided samples or assisted with the sampling, especially to Dominik Roman Letz, and to respective authorities for providing permissions for collection of the plant material. Thanks are also due to herbaria BC, BCN, MA for providing access to their collections. We also thank Camille Christe (Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de Genève) and Ivana Rešetnik (University of Zagreb) for their comments on an earlier version of this paper.

© 2024 The Authors ·

This open-access article is distributed under the  CC BY 4.0 licence

References

1.

Anthos 2023: Information System of the plants of Spain. Real Jardín Botánico, CSIC – Fundación Biodiversidad. – Published at  http://www.anthos.es/ [accessed 24 Apr 2023]. Google Scholar

2.

Bernardo L., Maiorca G., Roma-Marzio F. & Peruzzi L. 2018: Alyssum doerfleri Degen (Brassicaceae), new for the Italian flora. – Phytotaxa 334: 10–18.  https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.334.1.2 Google Scholar

3.

Cetlová V., Fuertes-Aguilar J., Iudova D. & Španiel S. 2019: Overlooked morphological variation and a proposal for a new taxonomic circumscription of Alyssum simplex (Brassicaceae). – Phytotaxa 416: 149–166.  https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.416.2.3 Google Scholar

4.

Cetlová V., Zozomová-Lihová J., Mártonfiová L., Melichárková A. & Španiel S. 2021: Multiple drivers of high species diversity and endemism among Alyssum annuals in the Mediterranean: the evolutionary significance of the Aegean hotspot. – Frontiers Pl. Sci. 12(627909).  https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2021.627909  Google Scholar

5.

Darriba D., Taboada G. L., Doallo R. & Posada D. 2012: jModelTest 2: more models, new heuristics and parallel computing. – Nature, Meth. 9: 772.  https://doi.org/10.1038/nmeth.2109  Google Scholar

6.

Doležel J., Sgorbati S. & Lucretti S. 1992: Comparison of three DNA fluorochromes for flow cytometric estimation of nuclear DNA content in plants. – Physiol. Pl. (Copenhagen) 85: 625–631.  https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1399-3054.1992.tb04764.x Google Scholar

7.

Flynn T. A. 2013: Evolution of nickel hyperaccumulation in Alyssum L. D. Phil. Thesis. – Oxford: Linacre College and Department of Plant Sciences, University of Oxford. Google Scholar

8.

Jalas J., Suominen J. & Lampinen R. 1996: Atlas florae europaeae 11. – Helsinki: The Committee for Mapping the Flora of Europe and Societas Biologica Fennica Vanamo. Google Scholar

9.

Küpfer P. & Nieto Feliner G. 1993: Alyssum. – Pp. 167–184 in: Castroviejo S., Aedo C., Gómez Campo C., Laínz M., Montserrat P., Morales R., Muñoz Garmendia F., Nieto Feliner G., Rico E., Talavera S. & Villar L. (ed.), Flora iberica 4. – Madrid: Real Jardin Botanico, C.S.I.C. Google Scholar

10.

Li Y., Feng Y., Lv G., Liu B. & Qi A. 2015: The phylogeny of Alyssum (Brassicaceae) inferred from molecular data. – Nordic J. Bot. 33: 715–721.  https://doi.org/10.1111/njb.00588 Google Scholar

11.

Maire R. 1967: Flore d'Afrique du Nord 13. – Paris: Lechevalier. Google Scholar

12.

Melichárková A., Španiel S., Brišková D., Marhold K. & Zozomová-Lihová J. 2017: Unravelling allopolyploid origins in the Alyssum montanum–A. repens (Brassicaceae) species complex: low-copy nuclear gene data complement plastid DNA sequences and AFLPs. – Bot. J. Linn. Soc. 184: 485–502.  https://doi.org/10.1093/botlinnean/box039 Google Scholar

13.

Melichárková A., Španiel S., Marhold K., Hurdu B. I., Drescher A. & Zozomová-Lihová J. 2019: Diversification and independent polyploid origins in the disjunct species Alyssum repens from the southeastern Alps and the Carpathians. – Amer. J. Bot. 106: 1499–1518.  https://doi.org/10.1002/ajb2.1370 Google Scholar

14.

Miller M. A., Pfeiffer W. & Schwartz T. 2010: Creating the CIPRES Science Gateway for inference of large phylogenetic trees. – Pp. 1–8 in: Proceedings of the Gateway Computing Environments Workshop (GCE), 14 November 2010. – New Orleans: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).  https://doi.org/10.1109/GCE.2010.5676129  Google Scholar

15.

Murín A. 1960: Substitution of cellophane for glass covers to facilitate preparation of permanent squashes and smears. – Stain Technol. 35: 351–353. Google Scholar

16.

Rešetnik I., Satovic Z., Schneeweiss G. M. & Liber Z. 2013: Phylogenetic relationships in Brassicaceae tribe Alysseae inferred from nuclear ribosomal and chloroplast DNA sequence data. – Molec. Phylogen. Evol. 69: 772–786.  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2013.06.026 Google Scholar

17.

Salmerón-Sánchez E., Fuertes-Aguilar J., Španiel S., Pérez-García F. J., Merlo E., Garrido-Becerra J. A. & Mota J. 2018: Plant evolution in alkaline magnesium-rich soils: a phylogenetic study of the Mediterranean genus Hormathophylla (Cruciferae: Alysseae) based on nuclear and plastid sequences. – PLoS One 13(e0208307).  https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208307 Google Scholar

18.

Sanz López J. & Palau Ramírez J. 1996: Mapa Geológico de España a escala 1:50.000, Hoja de Isil, n° 149 (33–8) – Madrid: Instituto Geológico y Minero de España (IGME). Google Scholar

19.

Španiel S., Haburajová L. & Cetlová V. 2018a: Diploid and tetraploid cytotypes and subspecies of Odontarrhena tortuosa (Brassicaceae) in Pannonia: differences in morphology, ecology and genome size. – Phytotaxa 358: 162–180.  https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.358.2.4 Google Scholar

20.

Španiel S., Juillerat P., Kaplan K., Bovio M., Bäumler B., Perret M., Mártonfiová L. & Zozomová-Lihová J. 2023a: Out of the Balkans and Anatolia to the western Alps? Surprising phylogenetic implications for two endemic Alyssum (Brassicaceae) species: A. cognense sp. nov. and A. rossetii. – Bot. J. Linn. Soc. 201: 286–308.  https://doi.org/10.1093/botlinnean/boac041  Google Scholar

21.

Španiel S., Kaplan K., Bovio M., Mártonfiová L. & Cetlová V. 2018b: Alyssum rossetii (Brassicaceae), a new species from the Aosta Valley in Italy based on morphological and genome size data. – Phytotaxa 360: 269–281.  https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.360.3.7 Google Scholar

22.

Španiel S., Kempa M., Salmerón-Sánchez E., Fuertes-Aguilar J., Mota J. F., Al-Shehbaz I. A., German D. A., Olšavská K., Šingliarová B., Zozomová-Lihová J. & Marhold K. 2015: AlyBase: database of names, chromosome numbers, and ploidy levels of Alysseae (Brassicaceae), with a new generic concept of the tribe. – Pl. Syst. Evol. 301: 2463–2491.  https://doi.org/10.1007/s00606-015-1257-3 Google Scholar

23.

Španiel S., Marhold K., Filová B. & Zozomová-Lihová J. 2011a: Genetic and morphological variation in the diploid–polyploid Alyssum montanum in Central Europe: taxonomic and evolutionary considerations. – Pl. Syst. Evol. 294: 1–25.  https://doi.org/10.1007/s00606-011-0438-y Google Scholar

24.

Španiel S., Marhold K., Passalacqua N. G. & Zozomová-Lihová J. 2011b: Intricate variation patterns in the diploid–polyploid complex of Alyssum montanum–A. repens (Brassicaceae) in the Apennine peninsula: evidence for long-term persistence and diversification. – Amer. J. Bot. 98: 1887–1904.  https://doi.org/10.3732/ajb.1100147 Google Scholar

25.

Španiel S., Marhold K. & Zozomová-Lihová J. 2017a: The polyploid Alyssum montanumA. repens complex in the Balkans: a hotspot of species and genetic diversity. – Pl. Syst. Evol. 303: 1443–1465.  https://doi.org/10.1007/s00606-017-1470-3 Google Scholar

26.

Španiel S., Marhold K. & Zozomová-Lihová J. 2019: Polyphyletic Alyssum cuneifolium (Brassicaceae) revisited: morphological and genome size differentiation of recently recognized allopatric taxa. – J. Syst. Evol. 57: 287–301.  https://doi.org/10.1111/jse.12464 Google Scholar

27.

Španiel S., Šlenker M., Melichárková A., Caboňová M., Šandalová M., Zeisek V., Marhold K. & Zozomová-Lihová J. 2023b: Phylogenetic challenges in a recently diversified and polyploid-rich Alyssum (Brassicaceae) lineage: low divergence, reticulation, and parallel polyploid speciation. – Evolution 77: 1226–1244.  https://doi.org/10.1093/evolut/qpad035 Google Scholar

28.

Španiel S., Zozomová-Lihová J. & Marhold K. 2010: Alyssum (Brassicaceae). – Pp. 1938, E12–E14 in: Marhold K. (ed.), IAPT/IOPB chromosome data 10. – Taxon 59: 1934–1938, E1–E14.  https://doi.org/10.1002/tax.596056  Google Scholar

29.

Španiel S., Zozomová-Lihová J. & Marhold K. 2017b: Revised taxonomic treatment of the Alyssum montanumA. repens complex in the Balkans: a multivariate morphometric analysis. – Pl. Syst. Evol. 303: 1413–1442.  https://doi.org/10.1007/s00606-017-1468-x Google Scholar

30.

White T. J., Bruns T., Lee S. B. & Taylor J. W. 1990: Amplification and direct sequencing of fungal ribosomal RNA genes for phylogenetics. – Pp. 315–322 in: Innis M. A., Gelfand D. H., Sninsky J. J. & White T. J. (ed.), PCR protocols: a guide to methods and applications. – San Diego: Academic Press.  https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-372180-8.50042-1 Google Scholar

31.

Zozomová-Lihová J., Marhold K. & Španiel S. 2014: Taxonomy and evolutionary history of Alyssum montanum (Brassicaceae) and related taxa in southwestern Europe and Morocco: diversification driven by poly-ploidy, geographic and ecological isolation. – Taxon 63: 562–591.  https://doi.org/10.12705/633.18 Google Scholar

32.

Zwickl D. J. 2006: Genetic algorithm approaches for the phylogenetic analysis of large biological sequence datasets under the maximum likelihood criterion. – Austin: D. Phil. Thesis, The University of Texas. Google Scholar

Appendices

Appendix 1

List of Alyssum and Odontarrhena species and populations included in the study. References in the last column indicate the origin of ITS sequences of nrDNA unless generated in the present study. Ploidy levels were determined by flow cytometry in the present study (population 684PQU) or taken from previous studies as indicated by superscripts: a Španiel & al. (2010); b Španiel & al. (2011a); c Španiel & al. (2018a); d Španiel & al. (2018b); e Zozomová-Lihová & al. (2014); f Cetlová & al. (2021).

img-z10-3_297.gif

Continued

img-z11-1_297.gif
Stanislav Španiel, Lenka Mártonfiová, and Judita Zozomová-Lihová "An unexpected occurrence of Alyssum rossetii (Brassicaceae) in the Pyrenees, a new species for the Spanish flora," Willdenowia 53(3), 297-307, (29 January 2024). https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.53.53307
Received: 25 May 2023; Accepted: 17 October 2023; Published: 29 January 2024
KEYWORDS
Alyssum
Brassicaceae
Cruciferae
flow cytometry
genome size
ITS of nrDNA
new record
Back to Top