Splitting one species into 22: an unusual tripling of molecular, morphological, and geographical differentiation in the fern family Didymochlaenaceae (Polypodiales)

Author:

Shang Hui12,Xue Zhi‐Qing13,Liang Zhen‐Long4,Kessler Michael5,Pollawatn Rossarin6,Lu Ngan Thi7,Gu Yu‐Feng8,Fan Xue‐Ping49,Tan Yun‐Hong101112,Zhang Liang9,Zhou Xin‐Mao13,Wan Xia241415,Zhang Li‐Bing24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Eastern China Conservation Centre for Wild Endangered Plant Resources Shanghai Chenshan Botanical Garden Shanghai 201602 China

2. Missouri Botanical Garden 4344 Shaw Blvd St Louis MO 63110 USA

3. Department of Botany and Biodiversity Research, Faculty of Life Sciences University of Vienna Rennweg 14 1030 Vienna Austria

4. Chengdu Institute of Biology Chinese Academy of Sciences P.O. Box 416 Chengdu Sichuan 610041 China

5. Systematic and Evolutionary Botany University of Zurich Zollikerstrasse 107 8008 Zurich Switzerland

6. Plants of Thailand Research Unit, Department of Botany, Faculty of Science Chulalongkorn University Bangkok 10330 Thailand

7. Department of Biology Vietnam National Museum of Nature, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology 18th Hoang Quoc Viet Road Ha Noi Vietnam

8. Key Laboratory of National Forestry and Grassland Administration for Orchid Conservation and Utilization The National Orchid Conservation & Research Center of Shenzhen Shenzhen Guangdong 518114 China

9. Key Laboratory for Plant Diversity and Biogeography of East Asia Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences Kunming Yunnan 650201 China

10. Southeast Asia Biodiversity Research Institute Chinese Academy of Sciences Mengla Yunnan 666303 China

11. Center for Integrative Conservation, Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden Chinese Academy of Sciences Mengla Yunnan 666303 China

12. Center of Conservation Biology Core Botanical Gardens, Chinese Academy of Sciences Mengla Yunnan 666303 China

13. School of Ecology and Environmental Science Yunnan University Kunming Yunnan 650091 China

14. College of Life Sciences Sichuan University Chengdu 610065 China

15. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100049 China

Abstract

AbstractThe pantropical fern genusDidymochlaena(Didymochlaenaceae) has long been considered to contain one species only. Recent studies have resolved this genus/family as either sister to the rest of eupolypods I or as the second branching lineage of eupolypods I, and have shown that this genus is not monospecific, but the exact species diversity is unknown. In this study, a new phylogeny is reconstructed based on an expanded taxon sampling and six molecular markers. Our major results include: (i)Didymochlaenais moderately or weakly supported as sister to the rest of eupolypods I, highlighting the difficulty in resolving the relationships of this important fern lineage in the polypods; (ii) species inDidymochlaenaare resolved into a New World clade and an Old World clade, and the latter further into an African clade and an Asian‐Pacific clade; (iii) an unusual tripling of molecular, morphological and geographical differentiation inDidymochlaenais detected, suggesting single vicariance or dispersal events in individual regions and no evidence for reversals at all, followed by allopatric speciation at more or less homogeneous rates; (iv) evolution of 18 morphological characters is inferred and two morphological synapomorphies defining the family are recognized—the elliptical sori and fewer than 10 sori per pinnule, the latter never having been suggested before; (v) based on morphological and molecular variation, 22 species in the genus are recognized contrasting with earlier estimates of between one and a few; and (vi) our biogeographical analysis suggests an origin forDidymochlaenain the latest Jurassic–earliest Cretaceous and the initial diversification of the extant lineages in the Miocene—all but one species diverged from their sisters within the last 27 Myr, in most cases associated with allopatric speciation owing to geologic and climatic events, or dispersal.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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