Back to Search Start Over

Diversification of Camphorosmeae (Amaranthaceae s.l.) during the Miocene-Pliocene aridification of inland Australia.

Authors :
Hühn, Philipp
McDonald, John
Shepherd, Kelly A.
Kadereit, Gudrun
Source :
Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution & Systematics. Sep2024, Vol. 64, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The Australian Camphorosmeae represent a monophyletic lineage that diversified to include ca. 150 spp. across 12 genera, and populate large parts of arid Australia. Tracking the origin and spread of this ancestrally salt and drought tolerant lineage provides additional evidence about the timing of the evolutionary history and phylogenetic assembly of arid habitats in Australia. Using a customized RADseq approach, sequence data for 104 species of the Australian Camphorosmeae representing all 12 genera were generated and included in phylogenetic and dating analyses. Furthermore, habitat type occurrences and preferences of species and clades were recorded. As suspected, the characters used to delimit current Australian Camphorosmeae genera do not support monophyletic groups, as phylogenetic analyses yielded 17 statistically supported clades across a large Maireana grade and crown radiation of Sclerolaena. The diversification of Australian Camphorosmeae is clearly linked to landscape changes and emerging new habitat types in arid Australia since the ancestral element likely arrived from temperate semi-arid to arid parts of continental Eurasia in the Middle Miocene. Migration was likely multidirectional and followed a west-to-east aridification. Crown group diversification was strongest during the Pliocene and likely promoted by the west-to-east expansion of Riverine Desert habitats and subsequent expansion and colonization of newly developing arid habitats. Rapid range expansion, fast habitat saturation, as well as periodic expansion, contraction and replacement of arid habitats, may have caused the rather species-poor clades of the earlier-divergent Maireana grade, compared to the continuously diversifying Sclerolaena clade. • Diversification of Australian Camphorosmeae is linked to landscape changes and emerging new habitat types. • A customized RADseq approach resolved the younger branches of a rapid radiation. • Phylogenetic analyses yielded 17 clades across a large Maireana grade and crown radiation of Sclerolaena. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14338319
Volume :
64
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution & Systematics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179372111
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ppees.2024.125811