@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref16122,
author = {Ruth E. B. Kirkpatrick},
title = {Investigating the monophyly of Pellaea (Pteridaceae) with a phylogenetic analysis of cheilanthoid ferns},
year = {2007},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Cheilanthoid ferns have a worldwide distribution and are found in seasonally dry and rocky habitats. Our inability to decipher natural lineages of cheilanthoids has been attributed to morphological convergence associated with adaptation to xeric environments. The goal of this study was to investigate the monophyly of the genus Pellaea by generating a DNA sequence-based cheilanthoid phylogeny. DNA sequences of the chloroplast rps4 gene and rps4-trnS intergenic spacer (IGS) were used from 105 exemplars, 60 of these were also employed to generate chloroplast trnL-F IGS sequences. Results show that Pellaea sensu Tryon and Tryon is polyphyletic; Pellaea sections Holcochlaena and Ormopteris are distant relatives of sections Pellaea and Platyloma and have closer relationships with Doryopteris. A monophyletic circumscription of "pellaeoid" ferns is here defined to include P. sect. Pellaea, P. sect. Platyloma, Astrolepis, and elements of Paragymnopteris and Paraceterach, all of which form a clade sister to Argyrochosma. The distribution of base chromosome numbers across the cheilanthoid phylogeny reveals potential synapomorphies of x = 29 for the pellaeoid clade and x = 27 for Argyrochosma, and suggests a trend toward reduction in base number during cheilanthoid evolution. Current geographic distribution of cheilanthoid ferns suggests a history of multiple introductions into the Old World from several New World ancestral lineages.}
}
Citation for Study 1754
Citation title:
"Investigating the monophyly of Pellaea (Pteridaceae) with a phylogenetic analysis of cheilanthoid ferns".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S1721
(Status: Published).
Citation
Kirkpatrick R. 2007. Investigating the monophyly of Pellaea (Pteridaceae) with a phylogenetic analysis of cheilanthoid ferns. Systematic Botany, null.
Authors
Abstract
Cheilanthoid ferns have a worldwide distribution and are found in seasonally dry and rocky habitats. Our inability to decipher natural lineages of cheilanthoids has been attributed to morphological convergence associated with adaptation to xeric environments. The goal of this study was to investigate the monophyly of the genus Pellaea by generating a DNA sequence-based cheilanthoid phylogeny. DNA sequences of the chloroplast rps4 gene and rps4-trnS intergenic spacer (IGS) were used from 105 exemplars, 60 of these were also employed to generate chloroplast trnL-F IGS sequences. Results show that Pellaea sensu Tryon and Tryon is polyphyletic; Pellaea sections Holcochlaena and Ormopteris are distant relatives of sections Pellaea and Platyloma and have closer relationships with Doryopteris. A monophyletic circumscription of "pellaeoid" ferns is here defined to include P. sect. Pellaea, P. sect. Platyloma, Astrolepis, and elements of Paragymnopteris and Paraceterach, all of which form a clade sister to Argyrochosma. The distribution of base chromosome numbers across the cheilanthoid phylogeny reveals potential synapomorphies of x = 29 for the pellaeoid clade and x = 27 for Argyrochosma, and suggests a trend toward reduction in base number during cheilanthoid evolution. Current geographic distribution of cheilanthoid ferns suggests a history of multiple introductions into the Old World from several New World ancestral lineages.
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S1754
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- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref16122,
author = {Ruth E. B. Kirkpatrick},
title = {Investigating the monophyly of Pellaea (Pteridaceae) with a phylogenetic analysis of cheilanthoid ferns},
year = {2007},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Cheilanthoid ferns have a worldwide distribution and are found in seasonally dry and rocky habitats. Our inability to decipher natural lineages of cheilanthoids has been attributed to morphological convergence associated with adaptation to xeric environments. The goal of this study was to investigate the monophyly of the genus Pellaea by generating a DNA sequence-based cheilanthoid phylogeny. DNA sequences of the chloroplast rps4 gene and rps4-trnS intergenic spacer (IGS) were used from 105 exemplars, 60 of these were also employed to generate chloroplast trnL-F IGS sequences. Results show that Pellaea sensu Tryon and Tryon is polyphyletic; Pellaea sections Holcochlaena and Ormopteris are distant relatives of sections Pellaea and Platyloma and have closer relationships with Doryopteris. A monophyletic circumscription of "pellaeoid" ferns is here defined to include P. sect. Pellaea, P. sect. Platyloma, Astrolepis, and elements of Paragymnopteris and Paraceterach, all of which form a clade sister to Argyrochosma. The distribution of base chromosome numbers across the cheilanthoid phylogeny reveals potential synapomorphies of x = 29 for the pellaeoid clade and x = 27 for Argyrochosma, and suggests a trend toward reduction in base number during cheilanthoid evolution. Current geographic distribution of cheilanthoid ferns suggests a history of multiple introductions into the Old World from several New World ancestral lineages.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 16122
AU - Kirkpatrick,Ruth E. B.
T1 - Investigating the monophyly of Pellaea (Pteridaceae) with a phylogenetic analysis of cheilanthoid ferns
PY - 2007
KW -
UR -
N2 - Cheilanthoid ferns have a worldwide distribution and are found in seasonally dry and rocky habitats. Our inability to decipher natural lineages of cheilanthoids has been attributed to morphological convergence associated with adaptation to xeric environments. The goal of this study was to investigate the monophyly of the genus Pellaea by generating a DNA sequence-based cheilanthoid phylogeny. DNA sequences of the chloroplast rps4 gene and rps4-trnS intergenic spacer (IGS) were used from 105 exemplars, 60 of these were also employed to generate chloroplast trnL-F IGS sequences. Results show that Pellaea sensu Tryon and Tryon is polyphyletic; Pellaea sections Holcochlaena and Ormopteris are distant relatives of sections Pellaea and Platyloma and have closer relationships with Doryopteris. A monophyletic circumscription of "pellaeoid" ferns is here defined to include P. sect. Pellaea, P. sect. Platyloma, Astrolepis, and elements of Paragymnopteris and Paraceterach, all of which form a clade sister to Argyrochosma. The distribution of base chromosome numbers across the cheilanthoid phylogeny reveals potential synapomorphies of x = 29 for the pellaeoid clade and x = 27 for Argyrochosma, and suggests a trend toward reduction in base number during cheilanthoid evolution. Current geographic distribution of cheilanthoid ferns suggests a history of multiple introductions into the Old World from several New World ancestral lineages.
L3 -
JF - Systematic Botany
VL -
IS -
ER -