Biogeography and diversification of the Caribbean clade of Miconia (Melastomataceae): a Cuban origin underlies one of the largest Antillean radiations

Author:

Majure Lucas C1ORCID,Bacci Lucas F1,Bécquer Eldis R2,Judd Walter S13,Clase Teodoro4,Skean J Dan5,Michelangeli Fabián A6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Natural History, Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida , Gainesville, FL 32611 , USA

2. Universidad de La Habana , Carretera ‘El Rocio’ Km 3.5, Calabazar, Boyeros, CP 19230, La Habana , Cuba

3. Department of Biology, University of Florida , Gainesville, FL 32611 , USA

4. Departamento de Botánica , Jardín Botánico Nacional ‘Dr. Rafael M. Moscoso’, Santo Domingo , Dominican Republic

5. Department of Biology, Albion College , Albion, MI 49224 , USA

6. The New York Botanical Garden , Bronx, NY 10458 , USA

Abstract

Abstract The Greater Antilles are renowned as a biodiversity hotspot and known to be geologically complex, which has led, in part, to the generation of organismal diversity in this area. One of the most species-rich montane groups within the Greater Antilles is the tribe Miconieae (Miconia s.l.) of the Melastomataceae, with ca. 325 species found there. The most diverse clade of Miconia in the Caribbean, the Caribbean clade, composes roughly half of that diversity, with an estimated 160 species, nearly all of which are endemic to the Greater Antilles. It is unclear how that diversity has been generated through time or where it originated, but we now have sufficiently well-sampled and robust datasets to test these patterns. Using a custom-built plastome dataset, we generated a robust phylogenetic hypothesis for 106 of the 160 Caribbean clade members and tested biogeographical patterns among the islands. Our results suggest that the Caribbean clade originated in the mid-Miocene, probably from a South American ancestor, and diversified substantially on the island of Cuba before repeatedly dispersing across other parts of the Greater Antilles, especially into nearby Hispaniola and then, to a lesser extent, into Jamaica, Puerto Rico and, finally, into the Lesser Antilles.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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