CiteULike CiteULike
Delicious Delicious
Connotea Connotea

Citation for Study 1104

About Citation title: "A Phylogenetic Study of Perideridia (Apiaceae) Based on Nuclear Ribosomal DNA ITS Sequences.".
About This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S1009 (Status: Published).

Citation

Downie S., Sun F., Katz-downie D., & Colletti G. 2004. A Phylogenetic Study of Perideridia (Apiaceae) Based on Nuclear Ribosomal DNA ITS Sequences. Systematic Botany, null.

Authors

  • Downie S.
  • Sun F.
  • Katz-downie D.
  • Colletti G.

Abstract

A phylogenetic study of the genus Perideridia (Apiaceae; tribe Oenantheae) was conducted to elucidate its circumscription, infrageneric relationships, and patterns in the evolution of available morphological, anatomical, and cytological characters. Nuclear rDNA ITS sequences were procured from 84 accessions of Perideridia, representing all 14 of its species and four of its six subspecies, and five outgroup taxa, and analyzed using maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood, and Bayesian inference methods. The trees recovered by each of these optimality criteria were congruent and generally quite robust. Upon the removal of the east Asian Perideridia neurophylla, previously referable to Pterygopleurum neurophyllum, the genus Perideridia is monophyletic and exclusively North American in distribution. Three major clades within the genus are inferred; the midwestern U.S. Perideridia americana is sister to all other species. With the exceptions of Perideridia lemmonii and P. bolanderi (where each species comprises two separate lineages), and P. oregana (whose limits are expanded to include tetraploid populations previously referred to as P. leptocarpa), all taxa were recovered as monophyletic. Optimization of 16 non-molecular characters on a phylogeny inferred by maximum parsimony analysis of combined ITS and non-molecular data revealed high instances of homoplasy, with the clade of P. howellii and P. kelloggii, taxa characterized by monostelic roots, supported by four of six synapomorphies. The occurrence of multistelic tuberous roots in all other species of Perideridia and in the unrelated Pterygopleurum neurophyllum suggests that this uncommon character among dicots has evolved twice in the family Apiaceae.

About this resource

  • Canonical resource URI: http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S1104
  • Other versions: Download Reconstructed NEXUS File Nexus Download NeXML File NeXML
  • Show BibTeX reference
  • Show RIS reference