Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant Biology, Ecology, and Evolution Oklahoma State University Stillwater Oklahoma USA
2. National Botanical Research Institute Windhoek Namibia
3. Tropical Pesticides Research Institute (TPRI) National Herbarium Arusha Tanzania
4. Department of Biological Sciences University of Zambia Lusaka Zambia
5. Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Richmond, Surrey UK
6. Plantae Novae Thousand Oaks California USA
7. Florida Museum of Natural History University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA
Abstract
AbstractAimLow taxon sampling and taxonomic uncertainties still obscure our evolutionary knowledge of many taxa, especially widespread lineages across diverse landscapes. Of particular interest are those lineages inhabiting seasonal and arid landscapes, which showcase unique distributional patterns that hint at fascinating histories. Using the most comprehensive sampling to date of a widespread bulbous monocot, we hypothesize two independent dispersals to Madagascar, and that vicariance due to Miocene‐driven aridification contracted a once‐widespread distribution between Africa and Eurasia.LocationSub‐Saharan Africa, Madagascar, Eurasia.TaxonLedebouriinae (Scilloideae, Asparagaceae).MethodsUsing the Angiosperms353 probe set for 195 taxa (86 ingroup taxa), we perform phylogenetic reconstruction using IQ‐Tree, and we infer age estimates using penalized likelihood as implemented in treePL. Capitalizing on our broad geographic sampling, which includes African, Malagasy and Eurasian taxa, we use ‘BioGeoBEARS’ to reconstruct ancestral ranges and investigate the role of vicariance and dispersal.ResultsThe Ledebouriinae originated within the past c. 30 myr in south‐eastern sub‐Saharan Africa, with the major subclades arising soon thereafter. Although long‐distance dispersal cannot be fully ruled out, we argue that vicariance was the major process responsible for the current distribution of Ledebouria in Eurasia. We recover two distinct Ledebouria groups that overlap in eastern Africa but are divided into mostly northern and southern clades with divergent biogeographical histories, each showing an independent dispersal to Madagascar. A similar north–south split is seen in Drimiopsis. Additionally, we recover a complex biogeographic history in the predominantly sub‐Saharan African Ledebouria clade, with rapid radiation at c. 14 mya.Main ConclusionsThe expansion of seasonal rainfall and aridity in sub‐Saharan Africa, coupled with orogenic activity, may have fostered the diversification of the Ledebouriinae and many subclades. Miocene‐driven aridification may have caused fragmentation of a once widespread distribution that led to their occurrence in Eurasia.
Funder
American Society of Plant Taxonomists
Botanical Society of America
Florida Museum of Natural History
Huntington Library
Society of Systematic Biologists
Subject
Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
1 articles.
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