The challenges of classifying big genera such as Ipomoea

Author:

Muñoz‐Rodríguez Pablo12ORCID,Wood John R.I.13ORCID,Wells Tom1ORCID,Carruthers Tom4ORCID,Sumadijaya Alex15ORCID,Scotland Robert W.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology University of Oxford South Parks Road Oxford OX1 3RB United Kingdom

2. Department of Biodiversity, Ecology and Evolution Universidad Complutense de Madrid C/ José Antonio Novais, 12 28040 Madrid Spain

3. Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Richmond London TW9 3AE United Kingdom

4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Michigan 1105 North University Ave, Biological Sciences Building Ann Arbor Michigan 48109‐1085 U.S.A.

5. Herbarium Bogoriense, Research Center for Biology National Research and Innovation Agency (BRIN) 23 Cibinong 16911 West Java Indonesia

Abstract

AbstractBig genera represent a significant proportion of the world's plants. However, comprehensive taxonomic and evolutionary studies of these genera are often complicated by their size and geographic spread. This paper explores the challenges faced in classifying these megadiverse plant groups consequent to the existing tension between diagnosability and increasing levels of resolution from molecular sequence data. We use recent examples from across angiosperms to illustrate how monophyly, diagnosability and completeness interplay with each other in attempts to classify several big genera and, specifically, the genus Ipomoea (Convolvulaceae). Ipomoea and the tribe Ipomoeeae have been the object of recent taxonomic and phylogenetic studies that highlight the limitations of previous attempts to classify the group, and show that the smaller segregate genera traditionally recognised in Ipomoeeae are nested within Ipomoea and are neither monophyletic nor diagnosable. We argue that existing classifications must be abandoned, and that recognising an expanded Ipomoea that incorporates all segregate genera of the Ipomoeeae is the most appropriate solution as it reconciles the properties of monophyly, diagnosability and completeness, and favours nomenclatural stability.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference146 articles.

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3. Flora of Panama. Part IX. Family 164. Convolvulaceae

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5. Ipomoea littoralis (Convolvulaceae)—taxonomy, distribution, and ethnobotany

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