A comprehensive chloroplast DNA-based phylogeny of the genus Potentilla (Rosaceae): Implications for its geographic origin, phylogeography and generic circumscription
A reconstruction of phylogenetic relationships based on three chloroplast DNA markers comprising 98 species of the genus Potentilla and 15 additional genera from the tribe Potentilleae (Rosaceae) is presented. The phylogeny supported the current generic concept of the subtribe Fragariinae and resolv...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 2010-07, Vol.56 (1), p.156-175 |
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Zusammenfassung: | A reconstruction of phylogenetic relationships based on three chloroplast DNA markers comprising 98 species of the genus
Potentilla and 15 additional genera from the tribe
Potentilleae (Rosaceae) is presented. The phylogeny supported the current generic concept of the subtribe
Fragariinae and resolved major lineages within the subtribe
Potentillinae. Resolved lineages corresponded to the combined genera
Argentina,
Piletophyllum, and
Tylosperma, an European and Asian group of species approximately equivalent to the
Trichocarpae Herbaceae sensu Th. Wolf, the series
Tormentillae Th. Wolf, a North American clade comprising the genera
Horkelia,
Horkeliella, and
Ivesia, the species
Potentilla fragarioides and
P. freyniana, and to a taxonomically highly diverse but molecularly little diverged core group of
Potentilla, respectively. Age estimates of phylogenetic splits resolved in the
Potentilleae using Bayesian inference, suggested a diversification of the tribe in the Eocene and radiation of two major evolutionary lineages corresponding to the
Fragariinae and
Potentillinae at approximately comparable times. Ancestral area reconstructions based on the recent distribution ranges of species and collection sites of cpDNA haplotypes suggested an Asian origin for
Potentilla s.str., and explained the arrival of this still informal taxon in Europe and particularly North America by multiple dispersal events. In combining the phylogenetic and geographic data with molecularly inferred time estimates and taxonomy, strongly contrasting evolutionary patterns were identified. These evolutionary patterns included rapid speciation on a continental and worldwide scale accompanied by multiple intercontinental dispersals opposed to largely diverged lineages of limited taxonomic diversity and vicariant geographic distribution. The molecular-based phylogeographic hypothesis finally is discussed on the background of the fossil record of
Potentilla. |
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ISSN: | 1055-7903 1095-9513 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ympev.2010.03.005 |