@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref20152,
author = {Jonathan A. Shaw and Blanka Shaw and MASANOBU HIGUCHI and TOMOTSUGU ARIKAWA and YUMIKO HIRAYAMA and Nicolas Devos},
title = {Climacium (Bryophyta): species relationships and biogeographic implications},
year = {2011},
keywords = {Eastern Asia-eastern North America disjunction, Climacium, Hypnales, Pleuroziopsis},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {The Bryologist},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Climacium is a small but morphologically distinctive genus (?tree mosses?) with three species distributed primarily in the Northern Hemisphere. Climacium dendroides occurs around the globe at northern latitudes with disjunct populations in Mexico and New Zealand, whereas C. americanum and C. kindbergii are endemic to eastern North America and C. japonicum is limited to eastern Asia. We tested the hypothesis that C. americanum and C. kindbergii from eastern North America have a sister group relationship with C. japonicum from eastern Asia. Phylogenetic inferences were based on nucleotide sequence data from five plastid loci plus the nuclear ribosomal ITS region. Climacium japonicum is resolved as sister to a clade containing C. dendroides, C. americanum, and C. kindbergii. Climacium americanum and C. kindbergii were not resolved by the sequence data but a clade containing both taxa is sister to C. dendroides. Geographically disjunct populations of C. dendroides in Asia, Mexico, the United States, and Canada vary at only a few polymorphic nucleotide sites across the three loci. Nevertheless, phylogenetic analyses suggest some infraspecific geographic structure with western North American and Australasian clades. The disjunctive New Zealand plants of C. dendroides are related to Asian accessions.}
}
Citation for Study 11474
Citation title:
"Climacium (Bryophyta): species relationships and biogeographic implications".
Study name:
"Climacium (Bryophyta): species relationships and biogeographic implications".
This study is part of submission 11464
(Status: Published).
Citation
Shaw J.A., Shaw B., Higuchi M., Arikawa T., Hirayama Y., & Devos N. 2011. Climacium (Bryophyta): species relationships and biogeographic implications. The Bryologist, .
Authors
-
Shaw J.A.
-
Shaw B.
-
Higuchi M.
-
Arikawa T.
-
Hirayama Y.
-
Devos N.
(submitter)
919-660-7298
Abstract
Climacium is a small but morphologically distinctive genus (?tree mosses?) with three species distributed primarily in the Northern Hemisphere. Climacium dendroides occurs around the globe at northern latitudes with disjunct populations in Mexico and New Zealand, whereas C. americanum and C. kindbergii are endemic to eastern North America and C. japonicum is limited to eastern Asia. We tested the hypothesis that C. americanum and C. kindbergii from eastern North America have a sister group relationship with C. japonicum from eastern Asia. Phylogenetic inferences were based on nucleotide sequence data from five plastid loci plus the nuclear ribosomal ITS region. Climacium japonicum is resolved as sister to a clade containing C. dendroides, C. americanum, and C. kindbergii. Climacium americanum and C. kindbergii were not resolved by the sequence data but a clade containing both taxa is sister to C. dendroides. Geographically disjunct populations of C. dendroides in Asia, Mexico, the United States, and Canada vary at only a few polymorphic nucleotide sites across the three loci. Nevertheless, phylogenetic analyses suggest some infraspecific geographic structure with western North American and Australasian clades. The disjunctive New Zealand plants of C. dendroides are related to Asian accessions.
Keywords
Eastern Asia-eastern North America disjunction, Climacium, Hypnales, Pleuroziopsis
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S11474
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref20152,
author = {Jonathan A. Shaw and Blanka Shaw and MASANOBU HIGUCHI and TOMOTSUGU ARIKAWA and YUMIKO HIRAYAMA and Nicolas Devos},
title = {Climacium (Bryophyta): species relationships and biogeographic implications},
year = {2011},
keywords = {Eastern Asia-eastern North America disjunction, Climacium, Hypnales, Pleuroziopsis},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {The Bryologist},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Climacium is a small but morphologically distinctive genus (?tree mosses?) with three species distributed primarily in the Northern Hemisphere. Climacium dendroides occurs around the globe at northern latitudes with disjunct populations in Mexico and New Zealand, whereas C. americanum and C. kindbergii are endemic to eastern North America and C. japonicum is limited to eastern Asia. We tested the hypothesis that C. americanum and C. kindbergii from eastern North America have a sister group relationship with C. japonicum from eastern Asia. Phylogenetic inferences were based on nucleotide sequence data from five plastid loci plus the nuclear ribosomal ITS region. Climacium japonicum is resolved as sister to a clade containing C. dendroides, C. americanum, and C. kindbergii. Climacium americanum and C. kindbergii were not resolved by the sequence data but a clade containing both taxa is sister to C. dendroides. Geographically disjunct populations of C. dendroides in Asia, Mexico, the United States, and Canada vary at only a few polymorphic nucleotide sites across the three loci. Nevertheless, phylogenetic analyses suggest some infraspecific geographic structure with western North American and Australasian clades. The disjunctive New Zealand plants of C. dendroides are related to Asian accessions.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 20152
AU - Shaw,Jonathan A.
AU - Shaw,Blanka
AU - HIGUCHI,MASANOBU
AU - ARIKAWA,TOMOTSUGU
AU - HIRAYAMA,YUMIKO
AU - Devos,Nicolas
T1 - Climacium (Bryophyta): species relationships and biogeographic implications
PY - 2011
KW - Eastern Asia-eastern North America disjunction
KW - Climacium
KW - Hypnales
KW - Pleuroziopsis
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Climacium is a small but morphologically distinctive genus (?tree mosses?) with three species distributed primarily in the Northern Hemisphere. Climacium dendroides occurs around the globe at northern latitudes with disjunct populations in Mexico and New Zealand, whereas C. americanum and C. kindbergii are endemic to eastern North America and C. japonicum is limited to eastern Asia. We tested the hypothesis that C. americanum and C. kindbergii from eastern North America have a sister group relationship with C. japonicum from eastern Asia. Phylogenetic inferences were based on nucleotide sequence data from five plastid loci plus the nuclear ribosomal ITS region. Climacium japonicum is resolved as sister to a clade containing C. dendroides, C. americanum, and C. kindbergii. Climacium americanum and C. kindbergii were not resolved by the sequence data but a clade containing both taxa is sister to C. dendroides. Geographically disjunct populations of C. dendroides in Asia, Mexico, the United States, and Canada vary at only a few polymorphic nucleotide sites across the three loci. Nevertheless, phylogenetic analyses suggest some infraspecific geographic structure with western North American and Australasian clades. The disjunctive New Zealand plants of C. dendroides are related to Asian accessions.
L3 -
JF - The Bryologist
VL -
IS -
ER -