Data from: Wide variation in ploidy level and genome size in a New Zealand freshwater snail with coexisting sexual and asexual lineages
Natural animal populations are rarely screened for ploidy-level variation at a scale that allows detection of potentially important aberrations of common ploidy patterns. This type of screening can be especially important for the many mixed sexual/asexual systems where sexuals are presumed to be dio...
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Zusammenfassung: | Natural animal populations are rarely screened for ploidy-level variation
at a scale that allows detection of potentially important aberrations of
common ploidy patterns. This type of screening can be especially important
for the many mixed sexual/asexual systems where sexuals are presumed to be
dioecious diploids and asexuals are assumed to be triploid and all-female.
For example, elevation of ploidy level above triploidy can be a source of
genetic variation and raises the possibility of gene flow among ploidy
levels and to asexual lineages. We used flow cytometry and mtDNA
sequencing to characterize ploidy level and genome size in Potamopyrgus
antipodarum, a New Zealand freshwater snail where obligate sexual
(presumed diploid and dioecious) and obligate apomictic asexual (presumed
triploid and nearly all female) individuals frequently coexist. We
documented the widespread occurrence and multiple origins of polyploid
males and individuals with >3x ploidy, and find that both are
likely to be descended from asexual females. Our survey also revealed
extensive variation in genome size. The discovery of widespread variation
in ploidy level and genome size in such a well-studied system highlights
the importance of broad, extensive, and ecologically representative
sampling in uncovering ploidy level and genome size variation in natural
populations. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.r0st0 |