Data from: Phylogeny of Cecropieae (Urticaceae) and the evolution of an ant-plant mutualism
Ant-plant mutualisms are abundant in the tropics and are popular models for ecological study, but investigating the origin and evolution of such systems requires a phylogenetic framework. A common ant-plant mutualism in the Neotropics involves the genus Cecropia, a group of fast-growing pioneer tree...
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Zusammenfassung: | Ant-plant mutualisms are abundant in the tropics and are popular models
for ecological study, but investigating the origin and evolution of such
systems requires a phylogenetic framework. A common ant-plant mutualism in
the Neotropics involves the genus Cecropia, a group of fast-growing
pioneer trees that are important in forest regeneration. Relationships
between genera in the tribe Cecropieae (Urticaceae), including Cecropia,
Coussapoa, Musanga, Myrianthus, and Pourouma, are unknown and are
necessary to investigate the evolutionary history of the Cecropia-ant
mutualism. Bayesian phylogenetic analyses of the NADH dehydrogenase (ndhF)
chloroplast gene region, the 26S region of nuclear ribosomal DNA, and an
exon-primed intron-crossing DNA region support the position of
non-myrmecophytic African Musanga within a paraphyletic Cecropia.
Neotropical Pourouma and Coussapoa are supported as sister taxa with
African Myrianthus as their closest relative. Although it remains
uncertain whether myrmecophytism was the ancestral condition of the
Cecropia clade, a close relationship between non-myrmecophytic Cecropia
sciadophylla and Musanga suggests that the loss of ant associations did
not accompany African colonization. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.7s8h6 |