@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref17674,
author = {Robert Douglas Stone},
title = {Phylogeny of major lineages in Melastomataceae, subfamily Olisbeoideae: utility of nuclear glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GapC) gene sequences},
year = {2005},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Here I present evidence for phylogenetic relationships in pan-tropical Melastomataceae, subfamily Olisbeoideae based on combined exon and intron sequences of the nuclear glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase gene. Parsimony and maximum-likelihood analyses yielded a well-supported ingroup tree consistent with earlier morphologically based concepts of six genera Memecylon, Mouriri, Votomita, Spathandra, Lijndenia, and Warneckea. The position of the root node in Olisbeoideae remains equivocal. Outgroup-rooted maximum parsimony suggests a deep divergence between Old and New World lineages, while the maximum-likelihood rooting resolved paleotropical genera as a paraphyletic grade basal to the neotropical taxa. The Fitch optimization method for estimating character evolution consistently inferred the strongly acrodromous leaf venation pattern as ancestral in Olisbeoideae, which reinforces the conclusion that the superficially uninervate or brochidodromiform venation pattern of Memecylon, the neotropical subclade, and some Lijndenia and Warneckea species is best interpreted as a series of independent losses of the strongly acrodromous condition. Genomic GapC sequences may have phylogenetic utility at intergeneric level in other angiosperm families, particularly those that have low apparent rates of chloroplast DNA sequence evolution.}
}
Citation for Study 1429
Citation title:
"Phylogeny of major lineages in Melastomataceae, subfamily Olisbeoideae: utility of nuclear glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GapC) gene sequences".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S1364
(Status: Published).
Citation
Stone R. 2005. Phylogeny of major lineages in Melastomataceae, subfamily Olisbeoideae: utility of nuclear glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GapC) gene sequences. Systematic Botany, null.
Authors
Abstract
Here I present evidence for phylogenetic relationships in pan-tropical Melastomataceae, subfamily Olisbeoideae based on combined exon and intron sequences of the nuclear glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase gene. Parsimony and maximum-likelihood analyses yielded a well-supported ingroup tree consistent with earlier morphologically based concepts of six genera Memecylon, Mouriri, Votomita, Spathandra, Lijndenia, and Warneckea. The position of the root node in Olisbeoideae remains equivocal. Outgroup-rooted maximum parsimony suggests a deep divergence between Old and New World lineages, while the maximum-likelihood rooting resolved paleotropical genera as a paraphyletic grade basal to the neotropical taxa. The Fitch optimization method for estimating character evolution consistently inferred the strongly acrodromous leaf venation pattern as ancestral in Olisbeoideae, which reinforces the conclusion that the superficially uninervate or brochidodromiform venation pattern of Memecylon, the neotropical subclade, and some Lijndenia and Warneckea species is best interpreted as a series of independent losses of the strongly acrodromous condition. Genomic GapC sequences may have phylogenetic utility at intergeneric level in other angiosperm families, particularly those that have low apparent rates of chloroplast DNA sequence evolution.
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S1429
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@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref17674,
author = {Robert Douglas Stone},
title = {Phylogeny of major lineages in Melastomataceae, subfamily Olisbeoideae: utility of nuclear glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GapC) gene sequences},
year = {2005},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Here I present evidence for phylogenetic relationships in pan-tropical Melastomataceae, subfamily Olisbeoideae based on combined exon and intron sequences of the nuclear glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase gene. Parsimony and maximum-likelihood analyses yielded a well-supported ingroup tree consistent with earlier morphologically based concepts of six genera Memecylon, Mouriri, Votomita, Spathandra, Lijndenia, and Warneckea. The position of the root node in Olisbeoideae remains equivocal. Outgroup-rooted maximum parsimony suggests a deep divergence between Old and New World lineages, while the maximum-likelihood rooting resolved paleotropical genera as a paraphyletic grade basal to the neotropical taxa. The Fitch optimization method for estimating character evolution consistently inferred the strongly acrodromous leaf venation pattern as ancestral in Olisbeoideae, which reinforces the conclusion that the superficially uninervate or brochidodromiform venation pattern of Memecylon, the neotropical subclade, and some Lijndenia and Warneckea species is best interpreted as a series of independent losses of the strongly acrodromous condition. Genomic GapC sequences may have phylogenetic utility at intergeneric level in other angiosperm families, particularly those that have low apparent rates of chloroplast DNA sequence evolution.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 17674
AU - Stone,Robert Douglas
T1 - Phylogeny of major lineages in Melastomataceae, subfamily Olisbeoideae: utility of nuclear glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GapC) gene sequences
PY - 2005
KW -
UR -
N2 - Here I present evidence for phylogenetic relationships in pan-tropical Melastomataceae, subfamily Olisbeoideae based on combined exon and intron sequences of the nuclear glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase gene. Parsimony and maximum-likelihood analyses yielded a well-supported ingroup tree consistent with earlier morphologically based concepts of six genera Memecylon, Mouriri, Votomita, Spathandra, Lijndenia, and Warneckea. The position of the root node in Olisbeoideae remains equivocal. Outgroup-rooted maximum parsimony suggests a deep divergence between Old and New World lineages, while the maximum-likelihood rooting resolved paleotropical genera as a paraphyletic grade basal to the neotropical taxa. The Fitch optimization method for estimating character evolution consistently inferred the strongly acrodromous leaf venation pattern as ancestral in Olisbeoideae, which reinforces the conclusion that the superficially uninervate or brochidodromiform venation pattern of Memecylon, the neotropical subclade, and some Lijndenia and Warneckea species is best interpreted as a series of independent losses of the strongly acrodromous condition. Genomic GapC sequences may have phylogenetic utility at intergeneric level in other angiosperm families, particularly those that have low apparent rates of chloroplast DNA sequence evolution.
L3 -
JF - Systematic Botany
VL -
IS -
ER -