@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref18986,
author = {David Sebastian Gernandt and Calixto Leon-Gomez and Sergio Hernandez-Leon and Mark E Olson},
title = {Pinus nelsonii and a Cladistic Analysis of Pinaceae Ovulate Cone Characters},
year = {2010},
keywords = {fossils, Obirastrobus, phylogeny, Pityostrobus, Pseudoaraucaria},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The complexity of ovulate cones and their preservation as fossils makes them promising material for reconstructing the evolutionary history of gymnosperms, but to date, phylogenetic analyses of cone morphological characters of Pinaceae have been inconclusive. We describe the ovulate cone anatomy of Pinus nelsonii, a rare and phylogenetically isolated pinyon pine endemic to Mexico, and add the species together with Pinus ponderosa and the fossil Pinus belgica to a recoded and expanded ovulate cone morphology matrix for fossil and extant Pinaceae. The cone anatomy of Pinus nelsonii conforms to previous generic concepts of Pinus. Despite its phylogenetically isolated position among the soft pines (Pinus subgenus Strobus) and thus potential for displaying plesiomorphic features, the cone of Pinus nelsonii is unlike the oldest Pinus fossil cones in possessing enlarged, functionally wingless seeds partially embedded in scale tissue, and in lacking sclerenchyma in the cortex of the axis, in the bract, and in the scale. Cladistic analysis of cone morphology characters recovers several Pityostrobus species in a clade with Pinus. Although the inferred relationships among living species do not coincide in several respects to molecular studies, adding taxa and further exploration of characters promises to clarify relationships.}
}
Citation for Study 10553
Citation title:
"Pinus nelsonii and a Cladistic Analysis of Pinaceae Ovulate Cone Characters".
Study name:
"Pinus nelsonii and a Cladistic Analysis of Pinaceae Ovulate Cone Characters".
This study is part of submission 10543
(Status: Published).
Citation
Gernandt D.S., Leon-gomez C., Hernandez-leon S., & Olson M.E. 2010. Pinus nelsonii and a Cladistic Analysis of Pinaceae Ovulate Cone Characters. Systematic Botany, .
Authors
-
Gernandt D.S.
(submitter)
011525556592227
-
Leon-gomez C.
-
Hernandez-leon S.
-
Olson M.E.
Abstract
The complexity of ovulate cones and their preservation as fossils makes them promising material for reconstructing the evolutionary history of gymnosperms, but to date, phylogenetic analyses of cone morphological characters of Pinaceae have been inconclusive. We describe the ovulate cone anatomy of Pinus nelsonii, a rare and phylogenetically isolated pinyon pine endemic to Mexico, and add the species together with Pinus ponderosa and the fossil Pinus belgica to a recoded and expanded ovulate cone morphology matrix for fossil and extant Pinaceae. The cone anatomy of Pinus nelsonii conforms to previous generic concepts of Pinus. Despite its phylogenetically isolated position among the soft pines (Pinus subgenus Strobus) and thus potential for displaying plesiomorphic features, the cone of Pinus nelsonii is unlike the oldest Pinus fossil cones in possessing enlarged, functionally wingless seeds partially embedded in scale tissue, and in lacking sclerenchyma in the cortex of the axis, in the bract, and in the scale. Cladistic analysis of cone morphology characters recovers several Pityostrobus species in a clade with Pinus. Although the inferred relationships among living species do not coincide in several respects to molecular studies, adding taxa and further exploration of characters promises to clarify relationships.
Keywords
fossils, Obirastrobus, phylogeny, Pityostrobus, Pseudoaraucaria
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S10553
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref18986,
author = {David Sebastian Gernandt and Calixto Leon-Gomez and Sergio Hernandez-Leon and Mark E Olson},
title = {Pinus nelsonii and a Cladistic Analysis of Pinaceae Ovulate Cone Characters},
year = {2010},
keywords = {fossils, Obirastrobus, phylogeny, Pityostrobus, Pseudoaraucaria},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The complexity of ovulate cones and their preservation as fossils makes them promising material for reconstructing the evolutionary history of gymnosperms, but to date, phylogenetic analyses of cone morphological characters of Pinaceae have been inconclusive. We describe the ovulate cone anatomy of Pinus nelsonii, a rare and phylogenetically isolated pinyon pine endemic to Mexico, and add the species together with Pinus ponderosa and the fossil Pinus belgica to a recoded and expanded ovulate cone morphology matrix for fossil and extant Pinaceae. The cone anatomy of Pinus nelsonii conforms to previous generic concepts of Pinus. Despite its phylogenetically isolated position among the soft pines (Pinus subgenus Strobus) and thus potential for displaying plesiomorphic features, the cone of Pinus nelsonii is unlike the oldest Pinus fossil cones in possessing enlarged, functionally wingless seeds partially embedded in scale tissue, and in lacking sclerenchyma in the cortex of the axis, in the bract, and in the scale. Cladistic analysis of cone morphology characters recovers several Pityostrobus species in a clade with Pinus. Although the inferred relationships among living species do not coincide in several respects to molecular studies, adding taxa and further exploration of characters promises to clarify relationships.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 18986
AU - Gernandt,David Sebastian
AU - Leon-Gomez,Calixto
AU - Hernandez-Leon,Sergio
AU - Olson,Mark E
T1 - Pinus nelsonii and a Cladistic Analysis of Pinaceae Ovulate Cone Characters
PY - 2010
KW - fossils
KW - Obirastrobus
KW - phylogeny
KW - Pityostrobus
KW - Pseudoaraucaria
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - The complexity of ovulate cones and their preservation as fossils makes them promising material for reconstructing the evolutionary history of gymnosperms, but to date, phylogenetic analyses of cone morphological characters of Pinaceae have been inconclusive. We describe the ovulate cone anatomy of Pinus nelsonii, a rare and phylogenetically isolated pinyon pine endemic to Mexico, and add the species together with Pinus ponderosa and the fossil Pinus belgica to a recoded and expanded ovulate cone morphology matrix for fossil and extant Pinaceae. The cone anatomy of Pinus nelsonii conforms to previous generic concepts of Pinus. Despite its phylogenetically isolated position among the soft pines (Pinus subgenus Strobus) and thus potential for displaying plesiomorphic features, the cone of Pinus nelsonii is unlike the oldest Pinus fossil cones in possessing enlarged, functionally wingless seeds partially embedded in scale tissue, and in lacking sclerenchyma in the cortex of the axis, in the bract, and in the scale. Cladistic analysis of cone morphology characters recovers several Pityostrobus species in a clade with Pinus. Although the inferred relationships among living species do not coincide in several respects to molecular studies, adding taxa and further exploration of characters promises to clarify relationships.
L3 -
JF - Systematic Botany
VL -
IS -
ER -