Members of this genus have been the subject of research by preeminent plant ecologists, evolutionary biologists, and geneticists, including
Charles Darwin,
Gregor Mendel,
Carl Correns,
Herbert G. Baker, and
Janis Antonovics. Many
Silene species continue to be widely used to study systems, particularly in the fields of ecology and evolutionary biology. The genus has been used as a model for understanding the genetics of sex determination for over a century.
Silene species commonly contain a mixture of hermaphroditic and female (or male-sterile) individuals (
gynodioecy), and early studies by Correns showed that male sterility could be maternally inherited, an example of what is now known as
cytoplasmic male sterility. Two independent groups of species in
Silene have evolved separate male and female sexes (
dioecy) with
chromosomal sex determination that is analogous to the system found in humans and other mammals.
Silene flowers are frequently visited by flies, such as
Rhingia campestris.
Silene species have also been used to study speciation, host-pathogen interactions, biological species invasions, adaptation to heavy-metal-contaminated soils, metapopulation genetics, and organelle genome evolution. ==Taxonomy==