Karyotic analysis among populations of Senna spectabilis (DC.) H.S. Irwin & Barneby (Leguminosae: Caesalapinioideae), an invasive alien species of South India

Karyotic analysis among populations of Senna spectabilis (DC.) H.S. Irwin & Barneby (Leguminosae: Caesalapinioideae), an invasive alien species of South India

Authors

Keywords:

Invasive alien species, Senna spectabilis, Kayotype, Westernghats, Cassia

Abstract

Senna spectabilis is an invasive alien species known for its extremely fast-growing habit, profusely flowering and fruit setting nature, and high coppicing ability. In India, its introduction is not well documented,which probably may have been introduced as an ornamental plant. Presently this species has aggressively spread across the moist deciduous forests of Wayanad wildlife sanctuary in the Western Ghats, peninsular India,with adverse impact on the survival of the indigenous species of flora and fauna. The present study used six distinct populations of the species, Anakkatty, Muthanga, Vythiri, Azhnjilam, Thiruvanathapuram and Munnar karyotype analysis. In mitotic metaphase, cells of S. spectabilis showed a stable chromosome count of 2n = 28, x =14. The statistical analysis shows that there was a significant difference between the characters studied. The observations were compared with the chromosome characters reported from native S. spectabilis population. While it was found that the chromosome number remainsthe same 2n = 28, there were differences with most of the characters studied. The study points to the requirement for more intense taxonomic studies and monitoring of this species and its populations.

Author Biographies

K. Muraleekrishanan, Kerala Forest Research Institute

Scientist, Division of Genetics & Tree Breeding, KFRI

T.K. Hrideek, Kerala Forest Research Institute

Research Scholar, KFRI

A.V. Santhoshkumar, Kerala Agricultural University

Professor, COllege of Forestry, KAU

References

Bentham, G.1871. Revision of the genus Cassia. Transactions of the Linnean Society, London, ,27, 503-591.

Britton, N. L. and Rose, J. N. 1930. Caesalpiniaceae. North Amer. Flora, 23,201-349.

Gaertner,M., Breeyen, A.D. and Hui, C. 2009. Impact of alien invasions on species richness in Mediterranean- type ecosystem: a meta Analysis. Progress in Physical Geography, 33,310-338, doi: 10.1177/0309133309341607

Gillman, E.F. and Watson, D.G. 2011. Senna spectabilis: Cassia., USA: Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (IFAS), University of Florida. Accessed from http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/st588.

Griffiths, A.J.F., Wessler, S.R., Carrol, S.B. and, Doebley, J. 2015. An Introduction to Genetic Analysis. 11th edition. W. H. Freeman, New York..

Harper, L.C. and Cande, W.Z. 2000. Mapping a new frontier; development of integrated cytogenetic maps in plants. Funct. Integr.

Genomics.1: 89-98. doi:10.1007/s101420000013.

Hrideek T.K., Suby and Amruth M. 2020. Invasive Alien Plants: A Potential Source of Unique Metabolites. In: Sukumaran S.T., Sugathan S.,

Abdulhameed S. (eds) Plant Metabolites: Methods, Applications and Prospects. Springer, Singapore. doi:10.1007/978-981-15-5136-9_7

Irwin, H.S. and Barneby, R.C. 1981. Cassieae. In: Advances in legume systematics, Part 1. Kew: Royal botanical gardens, 97-106.

Irwin, H.S. and Barneby, R.C. 1982. The American Cassiinae: A Synoptical Revision of Leguminosae Tribe Cassieae Subtribe Cassiinae in the New World. Kew Bulletin, 39(3), p.664, doi: 10.2307/4108613

Isley, D. 1975. Leguminosae of the United States: II. Subfamily Caesalpinioideae. Memoirs of the New York. Botanical Garden, 25, 1-228

Khuroo, A.A., Reshi, Z.A., Malik, A.H., Weber, E., Rashid, I. and Dar, G.H. 2012. Alien flora of India: taxonomic composition, invasion status and biogeographic affiliations. Biological invasion, 14, 99-113, doi:10.1007/s10530-011-9981-2

King, M. 1993. Species evolution : the role of chromosome change. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge UK, ISBN 0 521 35308 4

Lewis, W.H. 1980. Polyploidy in species populations. In Polyploidy: biological relevance (ed. Lewis WH.), pp. 103–144, New York, NY, Plenum

Mohanty, S and Das, A.B. 2006. Study of karyotype variability and genome size in 13 species of cassia L. in interpreting interspecific genetic diversity. Cytologia, 71(3),261-267, doi: 10.1508/cytologia.71.261

Mungatana, E. and Ahimbisibwe, P.B. 2010. Quantitative impacts of Invasive Senna spectabilis on distribution of welfare: a house hold survey of dependent communities in Budongo forest reserve, Uganda. Poster presented at the joint 3rd African Association of Agricultural Economists (AAAE) and 48th Agricultural Economists association of South Africa (AEASA) Conference, Cape Town, South Africa, September, 19-23, 2010.

Pagad, S., Genovesi, P., Carnevali, L., Schigel, D. and McGeoch, M. A. 2018. Introducing the global register of introduced and invasive species. Sci Data, 5(1), 170202, doi:10.1038/sdata.2017.202

PIER, 2014. Pacific Islands Ecosystems at Risk. Honolulu, USA: HEAR, University of Hawaii, http://www.hear.org/pier/index.html

Randall, J.M. 2007. The introduced flora of Australia and its weed status. CRC for Australian Weed Management, Department of Agriculture and Food, Western Australia, Australia’, 528 pp.

Resende, K.F.M., Davide, L.C. and Torres, G.A. 2013. Chromosome number and meiosis in populations of Senna species (Caesalpinioideae - Fabaceae) from Southeast Brazil. Caryologia, 66, 1-5, doi: 10.1080/00087114.2012.760883

Rieseberg, L. H. 2001. Chromosomal rearrangements and speciation. Trends in ecology and evolution, 16, 351-358,doi: 10.1016/s0169-5347(01)02187-5

Wright, S. 1978. Modes of Speciation. Michael J. D. White W. H. Freeman and Co., San Francisco , 456 pp..

Young, H.A., Sarath, G. and Tobias, C.M. 2012. Karyotype variation is indicative of subgenomic and ecotypic differentiation in switchgrass. BMC Plant Biol, 12, 117 (2012), doi:10.1186/1471-2229-12-117

Downloads

Published

03-05-2023

How to Cite

Muraleekrishanan, K., Hrideek, T., & Santhoshkumar, A. (2023). Karyotic analysis among populations of Senna spectabilis (DC.) H.S. Irwin & Barneby (Leguminosae: Caesalapinioideae), an invasive alien species of South India. Journal of Tropical Agriculture, 60(2). Retrieved from https://jtropag.kau.in/index.php/ojs2/article/view/1252

Issue

Section

Articles

Similar Articles

<< < 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Loading...