Data from: Inferring species networks from gene trees in high-polyploid North American and Hawaiian violets (Viola, Violaceae)
The phylogenies of allopolyploids take the shape of networks and cannot be adequately represented as bifurcating trees. Especially for high-polyploids (i.e., organisms with more than six sets of nuclear chromosomes), the signatures of gene homoeolog loss, deep coalescence and polyploidy may become c...
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Zusammenfassung: | The phylogenies of allopolyploids take the shape of networks and cannot be
adequately represented as bifurcating trees. Especially for
high-polyploids (i.e., organisms with more than six sets of nuclear
chromosomes), the signatures of gene homoeolog loss, deep coalescence and
polyploidy may become confounded, with the result that gene trees may be
congruent with more than one species network. Herein, we obtained the most
parsimonious species network by objective comparison of competing
scenarios involving polyploidization and homoeolog loss in a
high-polyploid lineage of violets (Viola, Violaceae) mostly or entirely
restricted to North America, Central America, or Hawaii. We amplified
homoeologs of the low-copy nuclear gene GPI by single-molecule PCR and the
chloroplast trnL-F region by conventional PCR for 51 species and
subspecies. Topological incongruence among GPI homoeolog subclades, owing
to deep coalescence and two instances of putative loss (or lack of
detection) of homoeologs, were reconciled by applying the maximum tree
topology for each subclade. The most parsimonious species network and the
fossil-based calibration of the homoeolog tree favored monophyly of the
high-polyploids, which has resulted from allodecaploidization 9–14 Ma ago,
involving sympatric ancestors from the extant Viola sections
Chamaemelanium (diploid), Plagiostigma (paleotetraploid), and Viola
(paleotetraploid). While two of the high-polyploid lineages
(Boreali-Americanae, Pedatae) remained decaploid, recurrent
polyploidization with tetraploids of section Plagiostigma within the last
5 Ma has resulted in two 14-ploid lineages (Mexicanae, Nosphinium) and one
18-ploid lineage (Langsdorffianae). This implies a more complex
phylogenetic and biogeographic origin of the Hawaiian violets (Nosphinium)
than that previously inferred from rDNA data and illustrates the necessity
of considering polyploidy in phylogenetic and biogeographic
reconstruction. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.68722 |