Abstract
TheArtemisia ludoviciana complex of the Northwest is considered to be an intervarietal autoploid complex on the basis of evidence obtained from cytogenetic analysis. The evidence includes the occurrence of chromosomal races within all but two of the inclusive taxa, the degree and constancy of multivalent formation in the polyploid races, and the high degree of homology among the genomes of the various taxa as demonstrated by the pairing relationships in the F1 progeny. Both triploid and tetraploid progeny were produced in diploid-tetraploid crosses, and the tetraploid offspring were fully as fertile as the natural tetraploids. The triploids, on the other hand, produced very few viable pollen grains. The production of tetraploid offspring in interracial crosses could provide a mechanism for gene flow from the diploid to the tetraploid population. With the observation of both diploid and tetraploid populations ofA. douglasiana, in addition to the well-known hexaploid, a reasonable doubt is cast upon the putative amphidiploid origin of the hexaploid via hybridization betweenA. suksdorfii andA. ludoviciana.