@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref20264,
author = {Lars Nauheimer and Peter Charles Boyce and Susanne S Renner},
title = {Giant taro and its relatives: A phylogeny of the large genus Alocasia (Araceae) sheds light on miocene floristic exchange in the malesian region },
year = {2011},
keywords = {Ancestral area reconstruction; Colocasia; Miocene climatic optimum; molecular clock; Wallacea, Sundaland },
doi = {10.1016/j.ympev.2011.12.011},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Alocasia comprises over 113 species of rainforest understorey plants in Southeast Asia, the Malesian region, and Australia. Several species, including giant taro, A. macrorrhizos, and Chinese taro, A. cucullata, are important food plants or ornamentals. We investigated the biogeography of this genus using plastid and nuclear DNA sequences (5200 nucleotides) from 78 accessions representing 71 species, plus 25 species representing 16 genera of the Pistia clade to which Alocasia belongs. Divergence times were inferred under strict and relaxed clock models, and ancestral areas with Bayesian and maximum likelihood approaches. Alocasia is monophyletic and sister to Colocasia gigantea from the SE Asian mainland, whereas the type species of Colocasia groups with Steudnera and Remusatia, requiring taxonomic realignments. Nuclear and plastid trees show topological conflict, with the nuclear trees reflecting morphological similarities, the plastid trees species? geographic proximity, suggesting chloroplast capture. The ancestor of Alocasia diverged from its mainland sister group c. 24 million years ago, and Borneo then played a central role in the expansion of Alocasia: 11?13 of 18?19 inferred dispersal events originated on Borneo. The Philippines were reached from Borneo 4?5 times in the Late Miocene and Early Pliocene, and the Asian mainland 6?7 times in the Pliocene. Domesticated giant taro originated on the Philippines, Chinese taro on the Asian mainland.}
}
Citation for Study 12182
Citation title:
"Giant taro and its relatives: A phylogeny of the large genus Alocasia (Araceae) sheds light on miocene floristic exchange in the malesian region ".
Study name:
"Giant taro and its relatives: A phylogeny of the large genus Alocasia (Araceae) sheds light on miocene floristic exchange in the malesian region ".
This study is part of submission 12182
(Status: Published).
Citation
Nauheimer L., Boyce P.C., & Renner S.S. 2011. Giant taro and its relatives: A phylogeny of the large genus Alocasia (Araceae) sheds light on miocene floristic exchange in the malesian region. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, .
Authors
-
Nauheimer L.
(submitter)
089 17861251
-
Boyce P.C.
-
Renner S.S.
011-49-(0)89-17861250
Abstract
Alocasia comprises over 113 species of rainforest understorey plants in Southeast Asia, the Malesian region, and Australia. Several species, including giant taro, A. macrorrhizos, and Chinese taro, A. cucullata, are important food plants or ornamentals. We investigated the biogeography of this genus using plastid and nuclear DNA sequences (5200 nucleotides) from 78 accessions representing 71 species, plus 25 species representing 16 genera of the Pistia clade to which Alocasia belongs. Divergence times were inferred under strict and relaxed clock models, and ancestral areas with Bayesian and maximum likelihood approaches. Alocasia is monophyletic and sister to Colocasia gigantea from the SE Asian mainland, whereas the type species of Colocasia groups with Steudnera and Remusatia, requiring taxonomic realignments. Nuclear and plastid trees show topological conflict, with the nuclear trees reflecting morphological similarities, the plastid trees species? geographic proximity, suggesting chloroplast capture. The ancestor of Alocasia diverged from its mainland sister group c. 24 million years ago, and Borneo then played a central role in the expansion of Alocasia: 11?13 of 18?19 inferred dispersal events originated on Borneo. The Philippines were reached from Borneo 4?5 times in the Late Miocene and Early Pliocene, and the Asian mainland 6?7 times in the Pliocene. Domesticated giant taro originated on the Philippines, Chinese taro on the Asian mainland.
Keywords
Ancestral area reconstruction; Colocasia; Miocene climatic optimum; molecular clock; Wallacea, Sundaland
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S12182
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- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref20264,
author = {Lars Nauheimer and Peter Charles Boyce and Susanne S Renner},
title = {Giant taro and its relatives: A phylogeny of the large genus Alocasia (Araceae) sheds light on miocene floristic exchange in the malesian region },
year = {2011},
keywords = {Ancestral area reconstruction; Colocasia; Miocene climatic optimum; molecular clock; Wallacea, Sundaland },
doi = {10.1016/j.ympev.2011.12.011},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Alocasia comprises over 113 species of rainforest understorey plants in Southeast Asia, the Malesian region, and Australia. Several species, including giant taro, A. macrorrhizos, and Chinese taro, A. cucullata, are important food plants or ornamentals. We investigated the biogeography of this genus using plastid and nuclear DNA sequences (5200 nucleotides) from 78 accessions representing 71 species, plus 25 species representing 16 genera of the Pistia clade to which Alocasia belongs. Divergence times were inferred under strict and relaxed clock models, and ancestral areas with Bayesian and maximum likelihood approaches. Alocasia is monophyletic and sister to Colocasia gigantea from the SE Asian mainland, whereas the type species of Colocasia groups with Steudnera and Remusatia, requiring taxonomic realignments. Nuclear and plastid trees show topological conflict, with the nuclear trees reflecting morphological similarities, the plastid trees species? geographic proximity, suggesting chloroplast capture. The ancestor of Alocasia diverged from its mainland sister group c. 24 million years ago, and Borneo then played a central role in the expansion of Alocasia: 11?13 of 18?19 inferred dispersal events originated on Borneo. The Philippines were reached from Borneo 4?5 times in the Late Miocene and Early Pliocene, and the Asian mainland 6?7 times in the Pliocene. Domesticated giant taro originated on the Philippines, Chinese taro on the Asian mainland.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 20264
AU - Nauheimer,Lars
AU - Boyce,Peter Charles
AU - Renner,Susanne S
T1 - Giant taro and its relatives: A phylogeny of the large genus Alocasia (Araceae) sheds light on miocene floristic exchange in the malesian region
PY - 2011
KW - Ancestral area reconstruction; Colocasia; Miocene climatic optimum; molecular clock; Wallacea
KW - Sundaland
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2011.12.011
N2 - Alocasia comprises over 113 species of rainforest understorey plants in Southeast Asia, the Malesian region, and Australia. Several species, including giant taro, A. macrorrhizos, and Chinese taro, A. cucullata, are important food plants or ornamentals. We investigated the biogeography of this genus using plastid and nuclear DNA sequences (5200 nucleotides) from 78 accessions representing 71 species, plus 25 species representing 16 genera of the Pistia clade to which Alocasia belongs. Divergence times were inferred under strict and relaxed clock models, and ancestral areas with Bayesian and maximum likelihood approaches. Alocasia is monophyletic and sister to Colocasia gigantea from the SE Asian mainland, whereas the type species of Colocasia groups with Steudnera and Remusatia, requiring taxonomic realignments. Nuclear and plastid trees show topological conflict, with the nuclear trees reflecting morphological similarities, the plastid trees species? geographic proximity, suggesting chloroplast capture. The ancestor of Alocasia diverged from its mainland sister group c. 24 million years ago, and Borneo then played a central role in the expansion of Alocasia: 11?13 of 18?19 inferred dispersal events originated on Borneo. The Philippines were reached from Borneo 4?5 times in the Late Miocene and Early Pliocene, and the Asian mainland 6?7 times in the Pliocene. Domesticated giant taro originated on the Philippines, Chinese taro on the Asian mainland.
L3 - 10.1016/j.ympev.2011.12.011
JF - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
VL -
IS -
ER -