Phylogeography and host‐shift speciation in the vampirecups, an enigmatic clade of endophytic holoparasitic plants

Author:

Martos Florent12ORCID,Hobbhahn Nina1,de Vega Clara3,Johnson Steven D.1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Functional Biodiversity, School of Life Sciences University of KwaZulu‐Natal Pietermaritzburg Scottsville South Africa

2. Institut de Systématique, Evolution, Biodiversité (ISYEB), Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, EPHE, Université des Antilles Paris France

3. Departamento de Biología Vegetal y Ecología, Facultad de Farmacia Universidad de Sevilla Sevilla Spain

Abstract

AbstractAimDiversification of obligate parasites is often closely associated with historical shifts among host species. This phenomenon is well‐documented in animal parasites but still poorly understood for parasitic plants. We studied the associations between host shifts, biogeography and diversification in Cytinus, a genus of endophytic holoparasitic plants which show a remarkable disjunct distribution.LocationMediterranean Basin, southern Africa, Madagascar.TaxonCytinus.MethodsWe sampled numerous populations in South Africa and the western Mediterranean Basin, as well as a few populations in Madagascar where the genus is rare. We amplified two nuclear (ITS and SSU) and two mitochondrial (matR and nad1) loci, to infer its evolutionary history using maximum likelihood and time‐calibrated Bayesian analyses, to elucidate the factors responsible for its current distribution and to assess whether host switching is a main driver of speciation.ResultsAll genes recover lineages corresponding to the three geographic areas of Cytinus and sublineages associated with specific host plants, although they disagree on their deep‐level relationships. Ribosomal nuclear genes support an initial split of the Malagasy lineage and an Afrotropical origin of Cytinus before colonization of warm temperate latitudes. Mitochondrial genes support an initial split of the Mediterranean and Afro‐Malagasy lineages and a later split between the South African and Malagasy clades. Introgressive hybridization is the most likely explanation for this discrepancy, while horizontal gene transfers from hosts is less likely. We found strong support for cryptic host‐specific diversity, with five and eight host races in the Mediterranean and South Africa respectively, and a strong phylogenetic signal in the host–parasite associations suggestive of parasite diversification via phylogenetic host tracking.Main ConclusionsThese dated phylogenies indicate that radiation through long‐distance dispersal events and adaptation to new hosts best explain the disjunct distribution of Cytinus. We emphasize the importance of host specificity and host‐switching in the diversification and biogeography of plant endoparasites.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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