A population of Laxmannia R. Br. (Angiospermae, Anthericaceae) near Collie, Western Australia, combines the taxonomically significant sessile inflorescences of L. sessiliflora Dcne. (n = 4) and the derived breeding system of L. ramosa Lindl. (n = 4). It exhibits a polymorphism for seed‐aborting lethal equivalents, significant levels of self‐pollination and a chromosome polymorphism in which a haploid genome with n = 3 is most frequent. Allozyme analysis indicates that the population is either of hybrid origin or one that has uniquely diverged from a phylogenetic link between the two species. The population is considered to represent a natural demonstration of the phenomenon of genomic coalescence as modelled by
James (1992, Heredity, 68
, 449–456) in which devices which reduce the number of independently segregating supergenes heterozygous for recessive lethals are elevated to high frequencies by inbreeding. The population also suggests a mechanism whereby dysploid chromosome number reduction may be promoted by natural selection in natural population systems.
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