Inter‐archipelago dispersal, anagenetic evolution, and the origin of a rare, enigmatic plant genus on a remote oceanic archipelago

Author:

Cho Myong‐Suk1,Kim Seon‐Hee2,Danton Philippe3,Kim Seung‐Chul1ORCID,Stuessy Tod F.45,Crawford Daniel J.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences Sungkyunkwan University Suwon Korea

2. Department of Botany, Graduate School of Science Kyoto University Kyoto Japan

3. 5 rue Galilée Grenoble 38000 France

4. Herbarium and Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology The Ohio State University Columbus 43212 Ohio USA

5. Department of Botany and Biodiversity Research University of Vienna Vienna Austria

6. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, and the Biodiversity Institute The University of Kansas Lawrence 66045 Kansas USA

Abstract

AbstractPremiseIsland plants have long interested biologists because of their distinctive morphological features and their isolation on small land areas in vast oceans. Studies of insular endemics may include identifying their ancestors, tracing their dispersal to islands, and describing their evolution on islands, including characters adaptive to island life. Thamnoseris is a monospecific genus endemic to the Desventuradas Islands, Chile. Its origins and relationships are unresolved, given the challenges of getting to the islands and accessing plants there.MethodsSequences from ITS of nrDNA and the complete chloroplast genome were employed to resolve phylogenetic relationships of Thamnoseris.ResultsPhylogenetic analyses of nuclear and chloroplast sequences showed Thamnoseris nested within or sister to Dendroseris, the largest endemic genus in the Juan Fernández Islands.ConclusionsThamnoseris evolved from a common ancestor of all or most species of Dendroseris prior to the diversification of Dendroseris in the Juan Fernández archipelago. The ancestor of Thamnoseris dispersed to the Desventuradas archipelago, which consists of the islands San Ambrosio and San Félix, within the past 3 Ma (the age of San Ambrosio). This is the only known example of possible plant dispersa\l between the Juan Fernández and Desventuradas Islands. We also mention two less likely biogeographic scenarios for the origin of Thamnoseris, which has features not seen in Dendroseris: small capitula with yellow florets; style branches barely divergent; and basally swollen subtending involucral bracts, all features associated with selfing and reduced dispersal. Goats and rabbits (now removed) reduced T. lacerata, once very abundant on the Desventuradas Islands, to several plants, making it of extreme conservation concern and worthy of further study.

Publisher

Wiley

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