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1 September 2010 Progress and Promise in using Arabidopsis to Study Adaptation, Divergence, and Speciation
Ben Hunter, Kirsten Bomblies
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Abstract

Fundamental questions remain to be answered on how lineages split and new species form. The Arabidopsis genus, with several increasingly well characterized species closely related to the model system A. thaliana, provides a rare opportunity to address key questions in speciation research. Arabidopsis species, and in some cases populations within a species, vary considerably in their habitat preferences, adaptations to local environments, mating system, life history strategy, genome structure and chromosome number. These differences provide numerous open doors for understanding the role these factors play in population divergence and how they may cause barriers to arise among nascent species. Molecular tools available in A. thaliana are widely applicable to its relatives, and together with modern comparative genomic approaches they will provide new and increasingly mechanistic insights into the processes underpinning lineage divergence and speciation. We will discuss recent progress in understanding the molecular basis of local adaptation, reproductive isolation and genetic incompatibility, focusing on work utilizing the Arabidopsis genus, and will highlight several areas in which additional research will provide meaningful insights into adaptation and speciation processes in this genus.

© 2010 American Society of Plant Biologists
Ben Hunter and Kirsten Bomblies "Progress and Promise in using Arabidopsis to Study Adaptation, Divergence, and Speciation," The Arabidopsis Book 2010(8), (1 September 2010). https://doi.org/10.1199/tab.0138
Published: 1 September 2010
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