Summary• Polyploidization and chromosomal rearrangements are recognized as major forces in plant evolution. Their role is investigated in the disjunctly distributed northern hemisphere Hepatica (Ranunculaceae).• Chromosome numbers, karyotype morphology, banding patterns, 5S and 35S rDNA localization in all known species were investigated and interpreted in a phylogenetic context established from nuclear internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and plastid matK sequences.• All species had a chromosome base number of x = 7. The karyotype was symmetric and showed little variation among diploids with one locus each of 5S and 35S rDNA, except for interpopulational variation concerning 35S rDNA loci number and localization in H. asiatica. Tetraploids exhibited chromosomal changes, including asymmetry and/or loss of rDNA loci. Nuclear and plastid sequences resulted in incongruent topologies because of the positions of some tetraploid taxa. The diversification of Hepatica occurred not earlier than the Pliocene.• Genome restructuring, especially involving 35S rDNA, within a few million yr or less characterizes evolution of both auto-and allopolyploids and of the diploid species H. asiatica, which is the presumptive ancestor of two other diploid species.
Using flow cytometry, we measured the nuclear DNA contents of all known taxa in Hepatica. Nuclear DNA content of Hepatica falconeri (diploid, crenate leaf lobes) was significantly lower than that of diploid entire species. Among the tetraploid species, crenate species had lower DNA contents than the entire taxon H. nobilis var. pubescens. The DNA content of the tetraploid species was more than double that of the diploid species among the same leaf-type groups.
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