@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref14876,
author = {Jiranan Bunsawat and Natalina E. Elliott and Kate L. Hertweck and Elizabeth Sproles and Lawrence A. Alice},
title = {Phylogenetics of Mentha (Lamiaceae): Evidence from Chloroplast DNA Sequences.},
year = {2004},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {29},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Phylogenetic relationships in Mentha were inferred from DNA sequences of the chloroplast (cp) rpl16 intron and trnL-trnF region. The objectives were to test monophyly of Mentha and each of its sections and assess relationships among Mentha species. Based on cpDNA data, Mentha is strongly supported as monophyletic. The suggestions that M. cervina and M. cunninghamii should be placed in other genera gain no support from this analysis. Mentha cervina is sister to M. gattefossei, and the New Zealand endemic, M. cunninghamii, is allied with species from Australia (M. australis, M. diemenica, M. satureioides). No recognized section with more than one species sampled forms a monophyletic group. Section Pulegium may be monophyletic, but the third member of this section, M. grandiflora, was not sampled. Chloroplast DNA sequences of the putative allopolyploids M. canadensis and M. spicata suggest that M. arvensis and M. longifolia, respectively, may be their maternal parents.}
}
Citation for Study 1180
Citation title:
"Phylogenetics of Mentha (Lamiaceae): Evidence from Chloroplast DNA Sequences.".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S1088
(Status: Published).
Citation
Bunsawat J., Elliott N., Hertweck K., Sproles E., & Alice L. 2004. Phylogenetics of Mentha (Lamiaceae): Evidence from Chloroplast DNA Sequences. Systematic Botany, 29.
Authors
-
Bunsawat J.
-
Elliott N.
-
Hertweck K.
-
Sproles E.
-
Alice L.
Abstract
Phylogenetic relationships in Mentha were inferred from DNA sequences of the chloroplast (cp) rpl16 intron and trnL-trnF region. The objectives were to test monophyly of Mentha and each of its sections and assess relationships among Mentha species. Based on cpDNA data, Mentha is strongly supported as monophyletic. The suggestions that M. cervina and M. cunninghamii should be placed in other genera gain no support from this analysis. Mentha cervina is sister to M. gattefossei, and the New Zealand endemic, M. cunninghamii, is allied with species from Australia (M. australis, M. diemenica, M. satureioides). No recognized section with more than one species sampled forms a monophyletic group. Section Pulegium may be monophyletic, but the third member of this section, M. grandiflora, was not sampled. Chloroplast DNA sequences of the putative allopolyploids M. canadensis and M. spicata suggest that M. arvensis and M. longifolia, respectively, may be their maternal parents.
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S1180
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref14876,
author = {Jiranan Bunsawat and Natalina E. Elliott and Kate L. Hertweck and Elizabeth Sproles and Lawrence A. Alice},
title = {Phylogenetics of Mentha (Lamiaceae): Evidence from Chloroplast DNA Sequences.},
year = {2004},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {29},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Phylogenetic relationships in Mentha were inferred from DNA sequences of the chloroplast (cp) rpl16 intron and trnL-trnF region. The objectives were to test monophyly of Mentha and each of its sections and assess relationships among Mentha species. Based on cpDNA data, Mentha is strongly supported as monophyletic. The suggestions that M. cervina and M. cunninghamii should be placed in other genera gain no support from this analysis. Mentha cervina is sister to M. gattefossei, and the New Zealand endemic, M. cunninghamii, is allied with species from Australia (M. australis, M. diemenica, M. satureioides). No recognized section with more than one species sampled forms a monophyletic group. Section Pulegium may be monophyletic, but the third member of this section, M. grandiflora, was not sampled. Chloroplast DNA sequences of the putative allopolyploids M. canadensis and M. spicata suggest that M. arvensis and M. longifolia, respectively, may be their maternal parents.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 14876
AU - Bunsawat,Jiranan
AU - Elliott,Natalina E.
AU - Hertweck,Kate L.
AU - Sproles,Elizabeth
AU - Alice,Lawrence A.
T1 - Phylogenetics of Mentha (Lamiaceae): Evidence from Chloroplast DNA Sequences.
PY - 2004
KW -
UR -
N2 - Phylogenetic relationships in Mentha were inferred from DNA sequences of the chloroplast (cp) rpl16 intron and trnL-trnF region. The objectives were to test monophyly of Mentha and each of its sections and assess relationships among Mentha species. Based on cpDNA data, Mentha is strongly supported as monophyletic. The suggestions that M. cervina and M. cunninghamii should be placed in other genera gain no support from this analysis. Mentha cervina is sister to M. gattefossei, and the New Zealand endemic, M. cunninghamii, is allied with species from Australia (M. australis, M. diemenica, M. satureioides). No recognized section with more than one species sampled forms a monophyletic group. Section Pulegium may be monophyletic, but the third member of this section, M. grandiflora, was not sampled. Chloroplast DNA sequences of the putative allopolyploids M. canadensis and M. spicata suggest that M. arvensis and M. longifolia, respectively, may be their maternal parents.
L3 -
JF - Systematic Botany
VL - 29
IS -
ER -