A tough nutlet to crack: Resolving the phylogeny of Thesium (Thesiaceae), the largest genus in Santalales

Author:

García Miguel A.1ORCID,Mucina Ladislav23ORCID,Nickrent Daniel L.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Real Jardín Botánico‐CSIC Plaza de Murillo 2, 28014 Madrid Spain

2. Harry Butler Institute, Murdoch University 90 South Street, Murdoch 6150 Perth Australia

3. Department of Geography and Environmental Studies Stellenbosch University Stellenbosch South Africa

4. Plant Biology Section School of Integrative Plant Science 332 Emerson Hall, College of Agriculture and Life Science, Cornell University, Ithaca New York 14853‐4203 U.S.A.

Abstract

AbstractWith over 350 species, Thesium is the largest genus in Santalales. It is found on all continents except Antarctica; however, its highest diversity is in the Cape Floristic Region of South Africa where approximately half the species occur. Thesium samples of ca. 590 collections from throughout its entire geographic range were obtained and nuclear ribosomal ITS sequenced from 396 accessions representing 196 named taxa and 30 currently unnamed taxa for a total of ca. 230 species. In addition, two chloroplast genome spacers (trnDT, trnLF) were sequenced from 269 and 315 accessions, respectively. Maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood and Bayesian methods were employed to generate gene trees and infer phylogenies. The value of the morphological characters traditionally used in the taxonomy of the genus and previous infrageneric classifications are discussed. Broad scale relationships were generally congruent among the ITS and the chloroplast trees. For example, both the nuclear and chloroplast trees support the presence of Eurasian and African clades. In contrast, major incongruence was detected between nuclear and chloroplast trees for a number of taxa including the recently described T. nautimontanum that is sister to the entire African clade on the ITS tree. Although the causes of this incongruence are currently unknown, a novel form of chloroplast capture is hypothesized. A hypothesis of the biogeographical history of the genus based on our molecular phylogeny is presented.

Publisher

Wiley

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