Abstract
Results are given and discussed of karyological investigations on wild (19) and cultivated (2) populations of the invasive South African geophyte Oxalis pes-caprae L. from 21 different localities (Italy 16, Switzerland 1, Morocco 1 and South Africa 3). Plants from naturalized populations growing wild in Italy and Morocco proved to always be pentaploid (2n = 35), with small, metacentric or slightly sub-metacentric chromosomes. In plants cultivated in the Botanical Garden in Rome, both pentaploid and tetraploid (2n = 28) numbers were found, the latter being the first record of tetraploid plants from Italy. All plants from South African wild populations included tetraploid plants; in one population (Kirstenbosch) pentaploid plants were also detected. It is suggested that pentaploid plants are possibly more widespread in the species' native area than is currently believed.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank all the colleagues and friends who helped them to collect living plants and/or bulbs in Italy, Europe, Morocco and South Africa, particularly to G. Duncan (Kirstenbosch Botanical Garden). They are also grateful to Graziana Fiorini (Department of Evolutionary Biology, University of Florence) and Laura Vivona (Department of Agricultural Biotechnology, University of Florence) for their technical suggestions and contributions. They thank L.L. Dreyer for his critical revision in improving the first draft of the manuscript.