@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref16272,
author = {Matthew T. Lavin and Martin F. Wojciechowski and Adam Richman and Jay Rotella and Michael J. Sanderson and Angela Beyra-Matos},
title = {Identifying Tertiary radiations of Fabaceae in the Greater Antilles: alternatives to cladistic vicariance analysis.},
year = {2001},
keywords = {Fabaceae; island biogeography; cladistic vicariance analysis; molecular biogeography; penalized ; likelihood; coalescent theory},
doi = {10.1086/323474},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {International Journal of Plant Sciences},
volume = {162},
number = {(6 Supplement)},
pages = {S53--S76},
abstract = {The woody genera Pictetia and Poitea represent two of the most speciose endemic legume radiations in the Greater Antilles. Yet component, three-area-statements, and Brooks parsimony analysis suggest that Tertiary history has little influenced the distribution of these genera. Widespread taxa and composite areas may mask Early Tertiary influences, or the two genera may have a more recent history on these islands. Alternatively, nucleotide diversity, evolutionary rates, and coalescent analyses of molecular phylogenies all suggest the antiquity of the Pictetia and Poitea radiations. Molecular biogeographic approaches are used to identify and estimate the ages of these endemic Tethyan radiations. The results are corroborated by confirming a species-area disequilibrium among the legume floras for islands of the world. Age of island biota and area of island are both needed to most accurately predict numbers of endemic legume taxa. The findings presented here combined with the legume fossil record suggest that both Pictetia and Poitea stem from Early Tertiary North American boreotropical ancestors. Thus, Wolfe's hypothesis that the Greater Antilles harbor boreotropical relicts finds support.}
}
Citation for Study 886
Citation title:
"Identifying Tertiary radiations of Fabaceae in the Greater Antilles: alternatives to cladistic vicariance analysis.".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S754
(Status: Published).
Citation
Lavin M., Wojciechowski M., Richman A., Rotella J., Sanderson M., & Beyra-matos A. 2001. Identifying Tertiary radiations of Fabaceae in the Greater Antilles: alternatives to cladistic vicariance analysis. International Journal of Plant Sciences, 162((6 Supplement)): S53-S76.
Authors
-
Lavin M.
-
Wojciechowski M.
-
Richman A.
-
Rotella J.
-
Sanderson M.
-
Beyra-matos A.
Abstract
The woody genera Pictetia and Poitea represent two of the most speciose endemic legume radiations in the Greater Antilles. Yet component, three-area-statements, and Brooks parsimony analysis suggest that Tertiary history has little influenced the distribution of these genera. Widespread taxa and composite areas may mask Early Tertiary influences, or the two genera may have a more recent history on these islands. Alternatively, nucleotide diversity, evolutionary rates, and coalescent analyses of molecular phylogenies all suggest the antiquity of the Pictetia and Poitea radiations. Molecular biogeographic approaches are used to identify and estimate the ages of these endemic Tethyan radiations. The results are corroborated by confirming a species-area disequilibrium among the legume floras for islands of the world. Age of island biota and area of island are both needed to most accurately predict numbers of endemic legume taxa. The findings presented here combined with the legume fossil record suggest that both Pictetia and Poitea stem from Early Tertiary North American boreotropical ancestors. Thus, Wolfe's hypothesis that the Greater Antilles harbor boreotropical relicts finds support.
Keywords
Fabaceae; island biogeography; cladistic vicariance analysis; molecular biogeography; penalized ; likelihood; coalescent theory
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S886
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref16272,
author = {Matthew T. Lavin and Martin F. Wojciechowski and Adam Richman and Jay Rotella and Michael J. Sanderson and Angela Beyra-Matos},
title = {Identifying Tertiary radiations of Fabaceae in the Greater Antilles: alternatives to cladistic vicariance analysis.},
year = {2001},
keywords = {Fabaceae; island biogeography; cladistic vicariance analysis; molecular biogeography; penalized ; likelihood; coalescent theory},
doi = {10.1086/323474},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {International Journal of Plant Sciences},
volume = {162},
number = {(6 Supplement)},
pages = {S53--S76},
abstract = {The woody genera Pictetia and Poitea represent two of the most speciose endemic legume radiations in the Greater Antilles. Yet component, three-area-statements, and Brooks parsimony analysis suggest that Tertiary history has little influenced the distribution of these genera. Widespread taxa and composite areas may mask Early Tertiary influences, or the two genera may have a more recent history on these islands. Alternatively, nucleotide diversity, evolutionary rates, and coalescent analyses of molecular phylogenies all suggest the antiquity of the Pictetia and Poitea radiations. Molecular biogeographic approaches are used to identify and estimate the ages of these endemic Tethyan radiations. The results are corroborated by confirming a species-area disequilibrium among the legume floras for islands of the world. Age of island biota and area of island are both needed to most accurately predict numbers of endemic legume taxa. The findings presented here combined with the legume fossil record suggest that both Pictetia and Poitea stem from Early Tertiary North American boreotropical ancestors. Thus, Wolfe's hypothesis that the Greater Antilles harbor boreotropical relicts finds support.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 16272
AU - Lavin,Matthew T.
AU - Wojciechowski,Martin F.
AU - Richman,Adam
AU - Rotella,Jay
AU - Sanderson,Michael J.
AU - Beyra-Matos,Angela
T1 - Identifying Tertiary radiations of Fabaceae in the Greater Antilles: alternatives to cladistic vicariance analysis.
PY - 2001
KW - Fabaceae; island biogeography; cladistic vicariance analysis; molecular biogeography; penalized ; likelihood; coalescent theory
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/323474
N2 - The woody genera Pictetia and Poitea represent two of the most speciose endemic legume radiations in the Greater Antilles. Yet component, three-area-statements, and Brooks parsimony analysis suggest that Tertiary history has little influenced the distribution of these genera. Widespread taxa and composite areas may mask Early Tertiary influences, or the two genera may have a more recent history on these islands. Alternatively, nucleotide diversity, evolutionary rates, and coalescent analyses of molecular phylogenies all suggest the antiquity of the Pictetia and Poitea radiations. Molecular biogeographic approaches are used to identify and estimate the ages of these endemic Tethyan radiations. The results are corroborated by confirming a species-area disequilibrium among the legume floras for islands of the world. Age of island biota and area of island are both needed to most accurately predict numbers of endemic legume taxa. The findings presented here combined with the legume fossil record suggest that both Pictetia and Poitea stem from Early Tertiary North American boreotropical ancestors. Thus, Wolfe's hypothesis that the Greater Antilles harbor boreotropical relicts finds support.
L3 - 10.1086/323474
JF - International Journal of Plant Sciences
VL - 162
IS - (6 Supplement)
ER -