
Allison A. Snow, Kristen L. Uthus, and Theresa M. Culley
Weed species are known to evolve rapidly with their associated crops.
A better understanding of the mechanisms and rates of weed evolution
could aid in limiting or at least anticipating this process.
Spontaneous hybridization between crops and related weed species can
transfer crop genes coding for fitness-enhancing traits to wild
populations, but little is known about how easily this takes place in
various weed-crop complexes. We studied interspecific hybrids between
wild and cultivated radishes (Raphanus raphanistrum × R. sativus),
which often co-occur and share pollinators. To determine whether the
F1 generation represents a strong barrier to subsequent introgression,
we compared the fitness of wild plants and wild-crop hybrids. Two
experiments were carried out in Michigan, USA, one with potted plants
and the other involving four artificially established populations. In
the artificial populations, we used white flower color, a dominant,
crop-specific allele, to document the persistence of crop genes over
time. Wild plants had yellow flowers, which is a recessive trait. F1
hybrids had lower fitness than wild plants due to lower pollen
fertility, fewer seeds per plant, and delayed flowering. Despite these
disadvantages, hybrids contributed substantially to each population's
gene pool. After 3 yr, frequencies of white-flowered plants in the
artificial populations ranged from 8% to 22%, demonstrating that crop
genes persisted. Other studies of flower color variation in wild
populations of R. raphanistrum provide circumstantial evidence for
frequent crop-to-wild gene flow. We predict that, if cultivated radish
is engineered to possess transgenes coding for traits such as
resistance to insect herbivores, disease, herbicides, or environmental
stress, these fitness-related crop genes will easily spread to R.
raphanistrum.
Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology, Ohio State
** NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
is distributed for research and educational purposes only. **
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