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THE TETRAMERIUM LINEAGE (ACANTHACEAE: JUSTICIEAE) DOES NOT SUPPORT THE PLEISTOCENE ARC HYPOTHESIS FOR SOUTH AMERICAN SEASONALLY DRY FORESTS.

Authors :
Côrtes, Ana Luiza A.
Rapini, Alessandro
Daniel, Thomas F.
Source :
American Journal of Botany. Jun2015, Vol. 102 Issue 6, p992-1007. 16p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

* Premise of the study: The Tetramerium lineage (Acanthaceae) presents a striking ecological structuring in South America, with groups concentrated in moist forests or in seasonally dry forests. In this study, we investigate the circumscription and relationships of the South American genera as a basis for better understanding historic interactions between dry and moist biomes in the Neotropics. * Methods: We dated the ancestral distribution of the Tetramerium lineage based on one nuclear and four plastid DNA regions. Maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood, and Bayesian inference analyses were performed for this study using 104 terminals. Phylogenetic divergences were dated using a relaxed molecular clock approach and ancestral distributions obtained from dispersal-vicariance analyses. * Key results: The genera Pachystachys, Schaueria, and Thyrsacanthus are nonmonophyletic. A dry forest lineage dispersed from North America to South America and reached the southwestern part of the continent between the end of the Miocene and beginning of the Pleistocene. This period coincides with the segregation between Amazonian and Atlantic moist forests that established the geographic structure currently found in the group. * Conclusions: The South American genera Pachystachys, Schaueria, and Thyrsacanthus need to be recircumscribed. The congruence among biogeographical events found for the Tetramerium lineage suggests that the dry forest centers currently dispersed throughout South America are relatively old remnants, probably isolated since the Neogene, much earlier than the Last Glacial Maximum postulated by the Pleistocene Arc hypothesis. In addition to exploring the Pleistocene Arc hypothesis, this research also informs evolution in a lineage with numerous geographically restricted and threatened species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00029122
Volume :
102
Issue :
6
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Journal of Botany
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
108366198
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3732/ajb.1400558