Project Description: 

Flowering and reproduction are highly regulated processes in composite plants like sunflower which produce disks that are clusters of many individual flowers. Environmental cues like light and temperature interact with the circadian clock regulate what time of the season buds first start to develop, and the same integration of internal and external signals likely occurs as new whorls individual florets open daily to present pollen and receptive stigmas at reproductive maturity. Because the timing and nature of environmental signals varies across the landscape, natural variation in how flowering responds to these cues evolves to allow plants to flower at the correct time of the season. For instance, we have found the wild sunflower populations change from being day-length insensitive to short-day responsive to long-day responsive in their flowering time as one moves from North to South over sunflower's range in the central US. We have mapped the genetic factors contributing to these evolutionary transitions to a handful of genomic regions, and the undergraduate(s) working on this project may help to conduct genotyping and gene expression studies to define those intervals and underlying candidate genes further. We are also curious to determine the genetic basis of natural variation in the environmental control of floret maturation rhythms, and the undergraduate(s) working on this project will analyze time-lapse videos taken in the field last summer to investigate this question. Finally, to prepare for future field studies of floret maturation, the students may have become involved in advancing a genetic mapping cross we have developed for wild sunflowers.

Department: 
PMB
Undergraduate's Role: 

The undergraduate researchers will grow, care for, and cross sunflowers being used for studies of natural variation, and they may also be involved in scoring of floret maturation on previously acquired time lapse image series. 

Undergraduate's Qualifications: 

Students with strong interests in plant-environment interaction, evolution, and ecology will find the experience most rewarding. Attention to detail and good record keeping skills are essential. The student should be comfortable and enthusiastic about intermittently working in greenhouse or growth chamber conditions for extended periods, and they will be expected to follow guidelines for safely doing so. The student will be encouraged to participate in weekly Blackman lab group meetings as well.

Location: 
On Campus
Hours: 
6-9 hours
Project URL: 
https://nature.berkeley.edu/blackmanlab/