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Molecular phylogeny of tribe Stachydeae (Lamiaceae subfamily Lamioideae)

Authors :
Salmaki, Yasaman
Zarre, Shahin
Ryding, Olof
Lindqvist, Charlotte
Bräuchler, Christian
Heubl, Günther
Barber, Janet
Bendiksby, Mika
Salmaki, Yasaman
Zarre, Shahin
Ryding, Olof
Lindqvist, Charlotte
Bräuchler, Christian
Heubl, Günther
Barber, Janet
Bendiksby, Mika
Source :
Salmaki , Y , Zarre , S , Ryding , O , Lindqvist , C , Bräuchler , C , Heubl , G , Barber , J & Bendiksby , M 2013 , ' Molecular phylogeny of tribe Stachydeae (Lamiaceae subfamily Lamioideae) ' , Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution , vol. 69 , no. 3 , pp. 535-551 .
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Although tribe Stachydeae (Lamiaceae) is considered monophyletic, relationships within the tribe are still poorly understood. The complexity of Stachydeae includes paraphyletic genera, considerable morphological plasticity, a range of ploidy levels, and presumably frequent natural hybridization. We performed parsimony and Bayesian phylogenetic analyses of nuclear (ribosomal ITS) and plastid (trnL intron, trnL–trnF spacer, rps16 intron) DNA sequence data from a taxonomically and geographically broad sampling of the tribe to identify major evolutionary lineages and to test taxonomic hypotheses within this largest of all lamioid tribes. We included 143 accessions corresponding to 121 species, representing both Old and New World species, and all 12 recognized genera of tribe Stachydeae. Both nuclear and plastid data corroborate monophyly of the tribe, with Melittis as sister to all remaining Stachydeae. For the latter well-supported clade, we suggest the phylogenetic name Eurystachys. Within Eurystachys, although monophyly is supported by both nuclear and plastid data for several named and unnamed groups, the majority of recognized taxa appear to be para- or polyphyletic. The taxon compositions of most subclades are congruent between the plastid and nuclear tree topologies, whereas their relative phylogenetic placements are often not. This level of plastid–nuclear incongruence suggests considerable impact of hybridization in the evolution of Stachydeae.<br />Although tribe Stachydeae (Lamiaceae) is considered monophyletic, relationships within the tribe are still poorly understood. The complexity of Stachydeae includes paraphyletic genera, considerable morphological plasticity, a range of ploidy levels, and presumably frequent natural hybridization. We performed parsimony and Bayesian phylogenetic analyses of nuclear (ribosomal ITS) and plastid (trnL intron, trnL-trnF spacer, rps16 intron) DNA sequence data from a taxonomically and geographically broad sampling of the tribe to identify major evolutionary lineages and to test taxonomic hypotheses within this largest of all lamioid tribes. We included 143 accessions corresponding to 121 species, representing both Old and New World species, and all 12 recognized genera of tribe Stachydeae. Both nuclear and plastid data corroborate monophyly of the tribe, with Melittis as sister to all remaining Stachydeae. For the latter well-supported clade, we suggest the phylogenetic name Eurystachys. Within Eurystachys, although monophyly is supported by both nuclear and plastid data for several named and unnamed groups, the majority of recognized taxa appear to be para- or polyphyletic. The taxon compositions of most subclades are congruent between the plastid and nuclear tree topologies, whereas their relative phylogenetic placements are often not. This level of plastid-nuclear incongruence suggests considerable impact of hybridization in the evolution of Stachydeae. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Salmaki , Y , Zarre , S , Ryding , O , Lindqvist , C , Bräuchler , C , Heubl , G , Barber , J & Bendiksby , M 2013 , ' Molecular phylogeny of tribe Stachydeae (Lamiaceae subfamily Lamioideae) ' , Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution , vol. 69 , no. 3 , pp. 535-551 .
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1322650734
Document Type :
Electronic Resource