Kazakhstan Has an Unexpected Diversity of Medicinal Plants of the Genus Acorus (Acoraceae) and Could Be a Cradle of the Triploid Species A. calamus

Sokoloff, Dmitry D. and Degtjareva, Galina V. and Valiejo-Roman, Carmen M. and Severova, Elena E. and Barinova, Sophia and Chepinoga, Victor V. and Kuzmin, Igor V. and Sennikov, Alexander N. and Shmakov, Alexander I. and Skaptsov, Mikhail V. and Smirnov, Sergey V. and Remizowa, Margarita V. (2024) Kazakhstan Has an Unexpected Diversity of Medicinal Plants of the Genus Acorus (Acoraceae) and Could Be a Cradle of the Triploid Species A. calamus. Plants, 13 (14). p. 1978. ISSN 2223-7747

[thumbnail of plants-13-01978.pdf] Text
plants-13-01978.pdf - Published Version

Download (8MB)

Abstract

The Acorus calamus group, or sweet flag, includes important medicinal plants and is classified into three species: A. americanus (diploid), A. verus (tetraploid), and A. calamus (sterile triploid of hybrid origin). Members of the group are famous as components of traditional Indian medicine, and early researchers suggested the origin of the sweet flag in tropical Asia. Subsequent research led to an idea of the origin of the triploid A. calamus in the Amur River basin in temperate Asia, because this was the only region where both diploids and tetraploids were known to co-occur and be capable of sexual reproduction. Contrary to this hypothesis, triploids are currently very rare in the Amur basin. Here, we provide the first evidence that all three species occur in Kazakhstan. The new records extend earlier data on the range of A. verus for c. 1800 km. Along the valley of the Irtysh River in Kazakhstan and the adjacent Omsk Oblast of Russia, A. verus is recorded in the south, A. americanus in the north, and A. calamus is common in between. We propose the Irtysh River valley as another candidate for a cradle of the triploid species A. calamus. It is possible that the range of at least one parent species (A. americanus) has contracted through competition with its triploid derivative species, for which the Irtysh River floods provide a tool for downstream range expansion. We refine our earlier data and show that the two parent species have non-overlapping ranges of variation in a quantitative metric of leaf aerenchyma structure.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: STM Library > Agricultural and Food Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 20 Jul 2024 10:39
Last Modified: 20 Jul 2024 10:39
URI: http://open.journal4submit.com/id/eprint/3963

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item