@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref23276,
author = {Ling-Yun Chen and Guido Grimm and Qing-Feng Wang and Susanne S Renner},
title = {A phylogeny and biogeographic analysis for the Cape-Pondweed family Aponogetonaceae (Alismatales)},
year = {2015},
keywords = {Alismatales, aquatic plants, Biogeography, integrating fossil geographic ranges, molecular clock},
doi = {},
url = {http://www.umsl.edu/~renners/Chen_Grimm_Wang_Renner_Apono_MPE_2014.pdf},
pmid = {},
journal = {Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution},
volume = {82},
number = {},
pages = {111?117},
abstract = {The monocot family Aponogetonaceae (Alismatales) consists only of Aponogeton, with 57 species occurring in Africa, Madagascar, India and Sri Lanka, Southeast Asia and Australia. Earlier studies inferred a Madagascan or Australian origin for the genus. Aponogeton-like pollen is documented from the Late Cretaceous of Wyoming, the early mid-Eocene of Canada, and the late mid-Eocene of Greenland. We obtained nuclear and plastid DNA sequences for 42 species and generated a time-calibrated phylogeny, rooted on appropriate outgroups. Statistical biogeographic analyses were carried out with or without the fossils incorporated in the phylogeny. The recent-most common ancestor of living Aponogetonaceae appears to date to the mid-Eocene and to have lived in Madagascar or Africa (but not Australia). Three transoceanic dispersal events from Africa/Madagascar to Asia sometime during the Miocene could explain the observed species relationships. As inferred in earlier studies, an ancient Australian species is sister to all other Aponogetonaceae, while the remaining Australian species stem from an Asian ancestor that arrived from Asia about 5 million years ago. The family?s ancient Northern Hemisphere fossil record and deepest extant divergence between a single Australian species and an Africa/Madagascar clade are statistically well-supported and rank among the most unusual patters in the biogeography of flowering plants. }
}
Citation for Study 15898
Citation title:
"A phylogeny and biogeographic analysis for the Cape-Pondweed family Aponogetonaceae (Alismatales)".
Study name:
"A phylogeny and biogeographic analysis for the Cape-Pondweed family Aponogetonaceae (Alismatales)".
This study is part of submission 15898
(Status: Published).
Citation
Chen L., Grimm G., Wang Q., & Renner S.S. 2015. A phylogeny and biogeographic analysis for the Cape-Pondweed family Aponogetonaceae (Alismatales). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 82: 111?117.
Authors
-
Chen L.
-
Grimm G.
-
Wang Q.
-
Renner S.S.
011-49-(0)89-17861250
Abstract
The monocot family Aponogetonaceae (Alismatales) consists only of Aponogeton, with 57 species occurring in Africa, Madagascar, India and Sri Lanka, Southeast Asia and Australia. Earlier studies inferred a Madagascan or Australian origin for the genus. Aponogeton-like pollen is documented from the Late Cretaceous of Wyoming, the early mid-Eocene of Canada, and the late mid-Eocene of Greenland. We obtained nuclear and plastid DNA sequences for 42 species and generated a time-calibrated phylogeny, rooted on appropriate outgroups. Statistical biogeographic analyses were carried out with or without the fossils incorporated in the phylogeny. The recent-most common ancestor of living Aponogetonaceae appears to date to the mid-Eocene and to have lived in Madagascar or Africa (but not Australia). Three transoceanic dispersal events from Africa/Madagascar to Asia sometime during the Miocene could explain the observed species relationships. As inferred in earlier studies, an ancient Australian species is sister to all other Aponogetonaceae, while the remaining Australian species stem from an Asian ancestor that arrived from Asia about 5 million years ago. The family?s ancient Northern Hemisphere fossil record and deepest extant divergence between a single Australian species and an Africa/Madagascar clade are statistically well-supported and rank among the most unusual patters in the biogeography of flowering plants.
Keywords
Alismatales, aquatic plants, Biogeography, integrating fossil geographic ranges, molecular clock
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S15898
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- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref23276,
author = {Ling-Yun Chen and Guido Grimm and Qing-Feng Wang and Susanne S Renner},
title = {A phylogeny and biogeographic analysis for the Cape-Pondweed family Aponogetonaceae (Alismatales)},
year = {2015},
keywords = {Alismatales, aquatic plants, Biogeography, integrating fossil geographic ranges, molecular clock},
doi = {},
url = {http://www.umsl.edu/~renners/Chen_Grimm_Wang_Renner_Apono_MPE_2014.pdf},
pmid = {},
journal = {Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution},
volume = {82},
number = {},
pages = {111?117},
abstract = {The monocot family Aponogetonaceae (Alismatales) consists only of Aponogeton, with 57 species occurring in Africa, Madagascar, India and Sri Lanka, Southeast Asia and Australia. Earlier studies inferred a Madagascan or Australian origin for the genus. Aponogeton-like pollen is documented from the Late Cretaceous of Wyoming, the early mid-Eocene of Canada, and the late mid-Eocene of Greenland. We obtained nuclear and plastid DNA sequences for 42 species and generated a time-calibrated phylogeny, rooted on appropriate outgroups. Statistical biogeographic analyses were carried out with or without the fossils incorporated in the phylogeny. The recent-most common ancestor of living Aponogetonaceae appears to date to the mid-Eocene and to have lived in Madagascar or Africa (but not Australia). Three transoceanic dispersal events from Africa/Madagascar to Asia sometime during the Miocene could explain the observed species relationships. As inferred in earlier studies, an ancient Australian species is sister to all other Aponogetonaceae, while the remaining Australian species stem from an Asian ancestor that arrived from Asia about 5 million years ago. The family?s ancient Northern Hemisphere fossil record and deepest extant divergence between a single Australian species and an Africa/Madagascar clade are statistically well-supported and rank among the most unusual patters in the biogeography of flowering plants. }
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 23276
AU - Chen,Ling-Yun
AU - Grimm,Guido
AU - Wang,Qing-Feng
AU - Renner,Susanne S
T1 - A phylogeny and biogeographic analysis for the Cape-Pondweed family Aponogetonaceae (Alismatales)
PY - 2015
KW - Alismatales
KW - aquatic plants
KW - Biogeography
KW - integrating fossil geographic ranges
KW - molecular clock
UR - http://www.umsl.edu/~renners/Chen_Grimm_Wang_Renner_Apono_MPE_2014.pdf
N2 - The monocot family Aponogetonaceae (Alismatales) consists only of Aponogeton, with 57 species occurring in Africa, Madagascar, India and Sri Lanka, Southeast Asia and Australia. Earlier studies inferred a Madagascan or Australian origin for the genus. Aponogeton-like pollen is documented from the Late Cretaceous of Wyoming, the early mid-Eocene of Canada, and the late mid-Eocene of Greenland. We obtained nuclear and plastid DNA sequences for 42 species and generated a time-calibrated phylogeny, rooted on appropriate outgroups. Statistical biogeographic analyses were carried out with or without the fossils incorporated in the phylogeny. The recent-most common ancestor of living Aponogetonaceae appears to date to the mid-Eocene and to have lived in Madagascar or Africa (but not Australia). Three transoceanic dispersal events from Africa/Madagascar to Asia sometime during the Miocene could explain the observed species relationships. As inferred in earlier studies, an ancient Australian species is sister to all other Aponogetonaceae, while the remaining Australian species stem from an Asian ancestor that arrived from Asia about 5 million years ago. The family?s ancient Northern Hemisphere fossil record and deepest extant divergence between a single Australian species and an Africa/Madagascar clade are statistically well-supported and rank among the most unusual patters in the biogeography of flowering plants.
L3 -
JF - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
VL - 82
IS -
ER -