Molecular phylogeny of Incarvillea (Bignoniaceae) based on ITS and \[bu100\]TRN\[cmL‐Fsequences

Incarvillea is a herbaceous and temperate member of Bignoniaceae, previously divided into four subgenera, Niedzwedzkia, Amphicome, Incarvillea, and Pteroscleris. Niedzwedzkia and Amphicome have in the past been treated as independent genera. Different relationships have been proposed for the four su...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of botany 2005-04, Vol.92 (4), p.625-633
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Shaotian, Guan, Kaiyun, Zhou, Zhekun, Olmstead, Richard, Cronk, Quentin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Incarvillea is a herbaceous and temperate member of Bignoniaceae, previously divided into four subgenera, Niedzwedzkia, Amphicome, Incarvillea, and Pteroscleris. Niedzwedzkia and Amphicome have in the past been treated as independent genera. Different relationships have been proposed for the four subgenera. Here, maximum parsimony analysis using ITS and trnL‐F sequences resulted in similar trees and showed that the genus is monophyletic. Analysis of the combined data resulted in a single tree with five major clades highly supported and well resolved. The relationships of the five major clades are (subgenus Niedzwedzkia (Incarvillea olgae (subgenus Amphicome (subgenus Incarvillea, subgenus Pteroscleris))). All four subgenera are well supported for monophyly, with the exception of subgenus Incarvillea, represented here by I. sinensis and I. olgae. Incarvillea olgae is not closely related to I. sinensis, a conclusion supported by morphology. The two basal monotypic subgenera are found in Central Asia. The most species‐rich subgenus, Pteroscleris, has 10 species in the Himalaya‐Hengduan Mountains and may have dispersed early from central Asia to eastern Asia. Short branch lengths on the molecular trees within Pteroscleris suggest a recent and rapid radiation of this rosette‐forming subgenus, perhaps connected with the uplift of the Himalaya‐Hengduan massif.
ISSN:0002-9122
1537-2197
DOI:10.3732/ajb.92.4.625