@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref23101,
author = {Ingeborg C Gormley and Dorothea Bedigian and Richard G Olmstead},
title = {Phylogeny of Pedaliaceae and Martyniaceae and the placement of Trapella in Plantaginaceae},
year = {2014},
keywords = {convergent evolution, ETS, phylogeny, ndhF, trnLF},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {38},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Pedaliaceae and Martyniaceae are Old World and New World families occurring primarily in arid environments with some taxa exhibiting similar adaptations to dispersal by large animals. Their taxonomic histories have also been intertwined, since they have often been combined, as one family (e.g., Pedaliaceae). The temperate Asian aquatic plant Trapella was also assigned to Pedaliaceae, based on fruits with similar dispersal traits. With expanded sampling of both families, including Trapella, and data from ndhF, trnLF, and ETS sequences, this study confirms that the two families are distinct lineages, identifies a new placement for Trapella in tribe Gratioleae (Plantaginaceae s.l.), and shows that the two families exhibit a combination of shared floral morphology due to their proximity in Lamiales, and convergent functional morphology for dispersal. The phylogeny finds the three tribes of Pedaliaceae to be monophyletic, but shows that Sesamum is not monophyletic. }
}
Citation for Study 15676
Citation title:
"Phylogeny of Pedaliaceae and Martyniaceae and the placement of Trapella in Plantaginaceae".
Study name:
"Phylogeny of Pedaliaceae and Martyniaceae and the placement of Trapella in Plantaginaceae".
This study is part of submission 15676
(Status: Published).
Citation
Gormley I.C., Bedigian D., & Olmstead R.G. 2014. Phylogeny of Pedaliaceae and Martyniaceae and the placement of Trapella in Plantaginaceae. Systematic Botany, 38.
Authors
-
Gormley I.C.
-
Bedigian D.
-
Olmstead R.G.
Abstract
Pedaliaceae and Martyniaceae are Old World and New World families occurring primarily in arid environments with some taxa exhibiting similar adaptations to dispersal by large animals. Their taxonomic histories have also been intertwined, since they have often been combined, as one family (e.g., Pedaliaceae). The temperate Asian aquatic plant Trapella was also assigned to Pedaliaceae, based on fruits with similar dispersal traits. With expanded sampling of both families, including Trapella, and data from ndhF, trnLF, and ETS sequences, this study confirms that the two families are distinct lineages, identifies a new placement for Trapella in tribe Gratioleae (Plantaginaceae s.l.), and shows that the two families exhibit a combination of shared floral morphology due to their proximity in Lamiales, and convergent functional morphology for dispersal. The phylogeny finds the three tribes of Pedaliaceae to be monophyletic, but shows that Sesamum is not monophyletic.
Keywords
convergent evolution, ETS, phylogeny, ndhF, trnLF
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S15676
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref23101,
author = {Ingeborg C Gormley and Dorothea Bedigian and Richard G Olmstead},
title = {Phylogeny of Pedaliaceae and Martyniaceae and the placement of Trapella in Plantaginaceae},
year = {2014},
keywords = {convergent evolution, ETS, phylogeny, ndhF, trnLF},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {38},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Pedaliaceae and Martyniaceae are Old World and New World families occurring primarily in arid environments with some taxa exhibiting similar adaptations to dispersal by large animals. Their taxonomic histories have also been intertwined, since they have often been combined, as one family (e.g., Pedaliaceae). The temperate Asian aquatic plant Trapella was also assigned to Pedaliaceae, based on fruits with similar dispersal traits. With expanded sampling of both families, including Trapella, and data from ndhF, trnLF, and ETS sequences, this study confirms that the two families are distinct lineages, identifies a new placement for Trapella in tribe Gratioleae (Plantaginaceae s.l.), and shows that the two families exhibit a combination of shared floral morphology due to their proximity in Lamiales, and convergent functional morphology for dispersal. The phylogeny finds the three tribes of Pedaliaceae to be monophyletic, but shows that Sesamum is not monophyletic. }
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 23101
AU - Gormley,Ingeborg C
AU - Bedigian,Dorothea
AU - Olmstead,Richard G
T1 - Phylogeny of Pedaliaceae and Martyniaceae and the placement of Trapella in Plantaginaceae
PY - 2014
KW - convergent evolution
KW - ETS
KW - phylogeny
KW - ndhF
KW - trnLF
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Pedaliaceae and Martyniaceae are Old World and New World families occurring primarily in arid environments with some taxa exhibiting similar adaptations to dispersal by large animals. Their taxonomic histories have also been intertwined, since they have often been combined, as one family (e.g., Pedaliaceae). The temperate Asian aquatic plant Trapella was also assigned to Pedaliaceae, based on fruits with similar dispersal traits. With expanded sampling of both families, including Trapella, and data from ndhF, trnLF, and ETS sequences, this study confirms that the two families are distinct lineages, identifies a new placement for Trapella in tribe Gratioleae (Plantaginaceae s.l.), and shows that the two families exhibit a combination of shared floral morphology due to their proximity in Lamiales, and convergent functional morphology for dispersal. The phylogeny finds the three tribes of Pedaliaceae to be monophyletic, but shows that Sesamum is not monophyletic.
L3 -
JF - Systematic Botany
VL - 38
IS -
ER -