@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref17044,
author = {Gitte Petersen and Ole Seberg and Sarah Thors?e and Tina J?rgensen and Brian Mathew},
title = {A phylogeny of the genus Crocus (Iridaceae) based on sequence data from five plastid regions},
year = {2007},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Taxon},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {For the first time a phylogenetic analysis of the genus Crocus is presented. The phylogeny includes all but two of the currently 87 recognized species of the genus. The analysis is based on a total of 222 phylogenetically informative characters derived from nucleotide sequence data from three protein-coding (ndhF, accD, rpoC1) and two non-coding (trnH-psbA, rpl36-rps8) plastid regions. The phylogenetic hypothesis is in conflict with the primary classification of Mathew into subgenera and sections. Most notably by placing the highly morphologically deviant C. banaticus (subgenus Crociris), not as sister group to subgenus Crocus, but imbedded within it. The grouping of the taxa into series is better supported, though not entirely. Of the 15 series recognized by Mathew, eight are confirmed as being monophyletic, monophyly of one more remains a possibility, and monophyly of a further two series is only violated by one taxon. Not unexpectedly, the two most species rich groups, series Reticulati and series Biflori encompassing almost 1/3 of all species, are clearly non-monophyletic, but the present data do not satisfactorily solve their phylogenetic relationships.}
}
Citation for Study 1931
Citation title:
"A phylogeny of the genus Crocus (Iridaceae) based on sequence data from five plastid regions".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S1912
(Status: Published).
Citation
Petersen G., Seberg O., Thors?e S., J?rgensen T., & Mathew B. 2007. A phylogeny of the genus Crocus (Iridaceae) based on sequence data from five plastid regions. Taxon, null.
Authors
-
Petersen G.
4535322194
-
Seberg O.
+45 3532 2195
-
Thors?e S.
-
J?rgensen T.
-
Mathew B.
Abstract
For the first time a phylogenetic analysis of the genus Crocus is presented. The phylogeny includes all but two of the currently 87 recognized species of the genus. The analysis is based on a total of 222 phylogenetically informative characters derived from nucleotide sequence data from three protein-coding (ndhF, accD, rpoC1) and two non-coding (trnH-psbA, rpl36-rps8) plastid regions. The phylogenetic hypothesis is in conflict with the primary classification of Mathew into subgenera and sections. Most notably by placing the highly morphologically deviant C. banaticus (subgenus Crociris), not as sister group to subgenus Crocus, but imbedded within it. The grouping of the taxa into series is better supported, though not entirely. Of the 15 series recognized by Mathew, eight are confirmed as being monophyletic, monophyly of one more remains a possibility, and monophyly of a further two series is only violated by one taxon. Not unexpectedly, the two most species rich groups, series Reticulati and series Biflori encompassing almost 1/3 of all species, are clearly non-monophyletic, but the present data do not satisfactorily solve their phylogenetic relationships.
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S1931
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref17044,
author = {Gitte Petersen and Ole Seberg and Sarah Thors?e and Tina J?rgensen and Brian Mathew},
title = {A phylogeny of the genus Crocus (Iridaceae) based on sequence data from five plastid regions},
year = {2007},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Taxon},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {For the first time a phylogenetic analysis of the genus Crocus is presented. The phylogeny includes all but two of the currently 87 recognized species of the genus. The analysis is based on a total of 222 phylogenetically informative characters derived from nucleotide sequence data from three protein-coding (ndhF, accD, rpoC1) and two non-coding (trnH-psbA, rpl36-rps8) plastid regions. The phylogenetic hypothesis is in conflict with the primary classification of Mathew into subgenera and sections. Most notably by placing the highly morphologically deviant C. banaticus (subgenus Crociris), not as sister group to subgenus Crocus, but imbedded within it. The grouping of the taxa into series is better supported, though not entirely. Of the 15 series recognized by Mathew, eight are confirmed as being monophyletic, monophyly of one more remains a possibility, and monophyly of a further two series is only violated by one taxon. Not unexpectedly, the two most species rich groups, series Reticulati and series Biflori encompassing almost 1/3 of all species, are clearly non-monophyletic, but the present data do not satisfactorily solve their phylogenetic relationships.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 17044
AU - Petersen,Gitte
AU - Seberg,Ole
AU - Thors?e,Sarah
AU - J?rgensen,Tina
AU - Mathew,Brian
T1 - A phylogeny of the genus Crocus (Iridaceae) based on sequence data from five plastid regions
PY - 2007
KW -
UR -
N2 - For the first time a phylogenetic analysis of the genus Crocus is presented. The phylogeny includes all but two of the currently 87 recognized species of the genus. The analysis is based on a total of 222 phylogenetically informative characters derived from nucleotide sequence data from three protein-coding (ndhF, accD, rpoC1) and two non-coding (trnH-psbA, rpl36-rps8) plastid regions. The phylogenetic hypothesis is in conflict with the primary classification of Mathew into subgenera and sections. Most notably by placing the highly morphologically deviant C. banaticus (subgenus Crociris), not as sister group to subgenus Crocus, but imbedded within it. The grouping of the taxa into series is better supported, though not entirely. Of the 15 series recognized by Mathew, eight are confirmed as being monophyletic, monophyly of one more remains a possibility, and monophyly of a further two series is only violated by one taxon. Not unexpectedly, the two most species rich groups, series Reticulati and series Biflori encompassing almost 1/3 of all species, are clearly non-monophyletic, but the present data do not satisfactorily solve their phylogenetic relationships.
L3 -
JF - Taxon
VL -
IS -
ER -