Molecular systematics of Dendrobium (Orchidaceae, Dendrobieae) from mainland Asia based on plastid and nuclear sequences

[Display omitted] •Many traditional sections of Dendrobium from mainland Asian are not monophyletic.•Some traditional sections are revised, especially a broadened sect. Dendrobium.•A new section is suggested to establish to include D. jenkinsii and D. lindleyi.•Phylogeny of Dendrobium from mainland...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 2013-12, Vol.69 (3), p.950-960
Hauptverfasser: Xiang, Xiao-Guo, Schuiteman, André, Li, De-Zhu, Huang, Wei-Chang, Chung, Shih-Wen, Li, Jian-Wu, Zhou, Hai-Lang, Jin, Wei-Tao, Lai, Yang-Jun, Li, Zhen-Yu, Jin, Xiao-Hua
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Many traditional sections of Dendrobium from mainland Asian are not monophyletic.•Some traditional sections are revised, especially a broadened sect. Dendrobium.•A new section is suggested to establish to include D. jenkinsii and D. lindleyi.•Phylogeny of Dendrobium from mainland Asia are discussed with morphological data.•A broadened genus Dendrobium is proposed by both morphology and molecular findings. Dendrobium is one of the three largest genera and presents some of the most intricate taxonomic problems in the family Orchidaceae. Based on five DNA markers and a broad sampling of Dendrobium and its relatives from mainland Asia (109 species), our results indicate that mainland Asia Dendrobium is divided into eight clades (with two unplaced species) that form polytomies along the spine of the cladogram. Both Dendrobium and Epigeneium are well supported as monophyletic, whereas sect. Dendrobium, sect. Densiflora, sect. Breviflores, sect. Holochrysa, are paraphyletic/polyphyletic. Many ignored phylogenetic relationships, such as the one of major clades formed by D. jenkinsii and D. lindleyi (two members of sect. Densiflora), the Aphyllum group, the Devonianum group, the Catenatum group, the Crepidatum group, and the Dendrobium moniliforme complex are well supported by both molecular and morphological evidence. Based on our data, we propose to broaden sect. Dendrobium to include sect. Stuposa, sect. Breviflores, and sect. Holochrysa and to establish a new section to accommodate D. jenkinsii and D. lindleyi. Our results indicated that it is preferable to use a broad generic concept of Dendrobium and to pursue an improved infrageneric classification at sectional level, taking into account both morphology and current molecular findings.
ISSN:1055-7903
1095-9513
DOI:10.1016/j.ympev.2013.06.009