Testing species relationships and delimitation in the Amazonian hyperdominantAstrocaryumsectionHuicungo(Arecaceae) using chloroplast data from genome skimming

Author:

Rivas‐Chamorro Marinoli12ORCID,Cadenillas Richard34ORCID,Ge Xue‐Jun5ORCID,Jin Lu5ORCID,Millán Betty12ORCID,Roncal Julissa6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos Lima Peru

2. Museo de Historia Natural, Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos Av. Arenales 1256, Jesús María Peru

3. Instituto de Paleontología, Universidad Nacional de Piura Piura, 20002 Peru

4. Instituto de Ciencias Marinas y Limnológicas, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Austral de Chile Campus Isla Teja s/n, Valdivia 5090000 Chile

5. Key Laboratory of Plant Resources Conservation and Sustainable Utilization, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences Guangzhou China

6. Department of Biology Memorial University of Newfoundland St. John's Canada

Abstract

AbstractHyperdominant trees in Amazonia account for half of the individual trees (>10 cm dbh) in the forest, and thus play a crucial role in ecosystem dynamics. However, several of these widespread hyperdominant species may be complexes hiding cryptic diversity that can affect species richness estimates and conservation priorities. Here, we study the intraspecific variation ofAstrocaryum murumuru(Arecaceae), a keystone and hyperdominant species in Amazonia, also known asAstrocaryumsect.Huicungo, a complex of 15 understory to subcanopy palm species. Using chloroplast DNA from genome skimming (>66 kbp alignment) in a Bayesian framework, we present evidence thatA. sect.Huicungorepresents three separately evolving lineages, suggesting that the section is not a single hyperdominant species, and that the 15 morphology‐based species may be an over‐representation. Genome skimming chloroplast data did not fully resolve the species‐level phylogenetic relationships inA. sect.Huicungomostly because of gene discordance and the paraphyly of most species. Contrary to a previous nuclear‐based phylogenetic analysis, the chloroplast genomic data did not recoverA. sect.Huicungomonophyletic, but yielded monophyly in an increased number of species (six) in the complex. Interspecific phylogenetic relationships showed a geographic pattern, and the traditional morphology‐based classification was not supported. Our phylogenomic results are discussed in light of earlier phylogeographical studies using Sanger sequencing. Our findings show the utility of genome skimming data in species delimitation analyses to uncover intraspecific variation of hyperdominant species in Amazonia, the largest evergreen tropical forest.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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