Phylogeny and Biogeography of the Styracaceae

The dicotyledonous family Styracaceae is distributed among all the major Tertiary mixed‐mesophytic forest refugia of the Northern Hemisphere. To infer the biogeographical history of the family and its significance for models of Northern Hemisphere historical biogeography, the phylogeny of the Styrac...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:International journal of plant sciences 2001-11, Vol.162 (S6), p.S95-S116
Hauptverfasser: Fritsch, Peter W., Morton, Cynthia M., Chen, Tao, Meldrum, Candice
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:The dicotyledonous family Styracaceae is distributed among all the major Tertiary mixed‐mesophytic forest refugia of the Northern Hemisphere. To infer the biogeographical history of the family and its significance for models of Northern Hemisphere historical biogeography, the phylogeny of the Styracaceae was estimated from separate and combined analyses of three DNA sequence data sets (chloroplasttrnLintron/trnL‐trnFspacer, chloroplastrbcLgene, ITS region of nuclear ribosomal DNA) and a morphological data set of 47 characters. Up to 15 samples of other families of Ericalessensuthe Angiosperm Phylogeny Group were employed as outgroups. The results strongly support the monophyly of the family. Dispersal‐vicariance analysis and Fitch parsimony optimization support a Eurasian origin of the Styracaceae, with subsequent dispersion to the Americas. This scenario is consistent with a hypothesized European origin for the family based on the fossil record. The eastern Asian–eastern North American disjunct genusHalesiais not supported as monophyletic. The sole Asian species of this genus groups with the Asian genusRehderodendron, whereas the two North American species most often form parts of polytomies with other genera. The generally nested placement of the warm‐temperate deciduous species ofStyraxwithin the amphi‐Pacific tropical evergreen group is consistent with an initial spread of the genus across the North Atlantic land bridge as part of the Eocene boreotropical flora and subsequent intercontinental dispersion of derived warm‐temperate‐adapted elements.
ISSN:1058-5893
1537-5315
DOI:10.1086/323418