Abstract
N-terminal, 40 amino acid sequences of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase small subunit (SSU) are
given for four species of Proteaceae, six of Fagaceae including four from Nothofagus, and seven from
Solanaceae including six new sequences from Nicotiana. Phylogenetic trees, regarded as tentative since
only one protein is involved, are given for each of the three groups and approximate positions of
the families in the angiosperm tree are indicated. An example of the destabilizing of a hitherto invariant
site is given. Working from the 'molecular evolutionary clock' hypothesis, and deriving time from
plate tectonics, the data from both Proteaceae and Nothofagus lead to rates of evolution of SSU of
one non-silent nucleotide substitution per 9 My. This agrees with an early Cretaceous origin of the
angiosperms. A test is proposed to distinguish distributions that are the result of 'vicariance
biogeography' from those due to 'dispersal biogeography'. It is concluded that distribution of Nicotiana
is most likely due to dispersal.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
17 articles.
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