@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19996,
author = {Germinal Rouhan and Paulo H. Labiak and Emile Randrianjohany and France Rakotondrainibe},
title = {Not so Neotropical after all: the Grammitid Fern Genus Leucotrichum (Polypodiaceae) is also Paleotropical, as Revealed by a New Species from Madagascar},
year = {2011},
keywords = {cpDNA, Grammitidaceae, Indian Ocean, long-distance dispersal, phylogeny, pteridophytes},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Based on morphological and molecular evidence (DNA sequences from six plastid regions: atpB, rbcL, trnG-trnR, trnL-trnF, atpB-rbcL, and rps4-trnS), the new fern species Leucotrichum madagascariense is described from Madagascar, where it is found in the North (Marojejy), the Centre (Andringitra), and the South (Andohahela) regions. Leucotrichum madagascariense exhibits whitish and long laminar hairs, among the other distinguishing characters of the genus: arching fronds, laminar apices subconform to the lateral pinnae, dark sclerenchyma covered by the green laminar tissue, and laterally marginate petioles. Its most remarkable feature is the lack of the rhizome scales, a character that is shared with the Neotropical L. pseudomitchellae. However, our phylogenetic results suggest that this character has evolved twice independently within the genus. In contrast, the sister relationship between the new Madagascan species and the group composed of L. schenckii and L mortonii is morphologically supported by linear and deeply pinnatifid laminae, incised 2/3?3/4 of the way to the rachis along its length. Leucotrichum madagascariense is the only representative of the genus occurring in the Old World. Because it is nested within a clade of five Neotropical species, we hypothesize that its occurrence outside the Neotropics results from one long-distance dispersal event from America, likely Southeastern Brazil, to Madagascar.}
}
Citation for Study 11865
Citation title:
"Not so Neotropical after all: the Grammitid Fern Genus Leucotrichum (Polypodiaceae) is also Paleotropical, as Revealed by a New Species from Madagascar".
Study name:
"Not so Neotropical after all: the Grammitid Fern Genus Leucotrichum (Polypodiaceae) is also Paleotropical, as Revealed by a New Species from Madagascar".
This study is part of submission 11865
(Status: Published).
Citation
Rouhan G., Labiak P.H., Randrianjohany E., & Rakotondrainibe F. 2011. Not so Neotropical after all: the Grammitid Fern Genus Leucotrichum (Polypodiaceae) is also Paleotropical, as Revealed by a New Species from Madagascar. Systematic Botany, .
Authors
-
Rouhan G.
(submitter)
-
Labiak P.H.
-
Randrianjohany E.
-
Rakotondrainibe F.
Abstract
Based on morphological and molecular evidence (DNA sequences from six plastid regions: atpB, rbcL, trnG-trnR, trnL-trnF, atpB-rbcL, and rps4-trnS), the new fern species Leucotrichum madagascariense is described from Madagascar, where it is found in the North (Marojejy), the Centre (Andringitra), and the South (Andohahela) regions. Leucotrichum madagascariense exhibits whitish and long laminar hairs, among the other distinguishing characters of the genus: arching fronds, laminar apices subconform to the lateral pinnae, dark sclerenchyma covered by the green laminar tissue, and laterally marginate petioles. Its most remarkable feature is the lack of the rhizome scales, a character that is shared with the Neotropical L. pseudomitchellae. However, our phylogenetic results suggest that this character has evolved twice independently within the genus. In contrast, the sister relationship between the new Madagascan species and the group composed of L. schenckii and L mortonii is morphologically supported by linear and deeply pinnatifid laminae, incised 2/3?3/4 of the way to the rachis along its length. Leucotrichum madagascariense is the only representative of the genus occurring in the Old World. Because it is nested within a clade of five Neotropical species, we hypothesize that its occurrence outside the Neotropics results from one long-distance dispersal event from America, likely Southeastern Brazil, to Madagascar.
Keywords
cpDNA, Grammitidaceae, Indian Ocean, long-distance dispersal, phylogeny, pteridophytes
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S11865
- Other versions:
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- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19996,
author = {Germinal Rouhan and Paulo H. Labiak and Emile Randrianjohany and France Rakotondrainibe},
title = {Not so Neotropical after all: the Grammitid Fern Genus Leucotrichum (Polypodiaceae) is also Paleotropical, as Revealed by a New Species from Madagascar},
year = {2011},
keywords = {cpDNA, Grammitidaceae, Indian Ocean, long-distance dispersal, phylogeny, pteridophytes},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Based on morphological and molecular evidence (DNA sequences from six plastid regions: atpB, rbcL, trnG-trnR, trnL-trnF, atpB-rbcL, and rps4-trnS), the new fern species Leucotrichum madagascariense is described from Madagascar, where it is found in the North (Marojejy), the Centre (Andringitra), and the South (Andohahela) regions. Leucotrichum madagascariense exhibits whitish and long laminar hairs, among the other distinguishing characters of the genus: arching fronds, laminar apices subconform to the lateral pinnae, dark sclerenchyma covered by the green laminar tissue, and laterally marginate petioles. Its most remarkable feature is the lack of the rhizome scales, a character that is shared with the Neotropical L. pseudomitchellae. However, our phylogenetic results suggest that this character has evolved twice independently within the genus. In contrast, the sister relationship between the new Madagascan species and the group composed of L. schenckii and L mortonii is morphologically supported by linear and deeply pinnatifid laminae, incised 2/3?3/4 of the way to the rachis along its length. Leucotrichum madagascariense is the only representative of the genus occurring in the Old World. Because it is nested within a clade of five Neotropical species, we hypothesize that its occurrence outside the Neotropics results from one long-distance dispersal event from America, likely Southeastern Brazil, to Madagascar.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 19996
AU - Rouhan,Germinal
AU - Labiak,Paulo H.
AU - Randrianjohany,Emile
AU - Rakotondrainibe,France
T1 - Not so Neotropical after all: the Grammitid Fern Genus Leucotrichum (Polypodiaceae) is also Paleotropical, as Revealed by a New Species from Madagascar
PY - 2011
KW - cpDNA
KW - Grammitidaceae
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - long-distance dispersal
KW - phylogeny
KW - pteridophytes
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Based on morphological and molecular evidence (DNA sequences from six plastid regions: atpB, rbcL, trnG-trnR, trnL-trnF, atpB-rbcL, and rps4-trnS), the new fern species Leucotrichum madagascariense is described from Madagascar, where it is found in the North (Marojejy), the Centre (Andringitra), and the South (Andohahela) regions. Leucotrichum madagascariense exhibits whitish and long laminar hairs, among the other distinguishing characters of the genus: arching fronds, laminar apices subconform to the lateral pinnae, dark sclerenchyma covered by the green laminar tissue, and laterally marginate petioles. Its most remarkable feature is the lack of the rhizome scales, a character that is shared with the Neotropical L. pseudomitchellae. However, our phylogenetic results suggest that this character has evolved twice independently within the genus. In contrast, the sister relationship between the new Madagascan species and the group composed of L. schenckii and L mortonii is morphologically supported by linear and deeply pinnatifid laminae, incised 2/3?3/4 of the way to the rachis along its length. Leucotrichum madagascariense is the only representative of the genus occurring in the Old World. Because it is nested within a clade of five Neotropical species, we hypothesize that its occurrence outside the Neotropics results from one long-distance dispersal event from America, likely Southeastern Brazil, to Madagascar.
L3 -
JF - Systematic Botany
VL -
IS -
ER -