@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref17600,
author = {Russ Spangler and Ben Zaitchik and Elizabeth Russo and Elizabeth A. Kellogg},
title = {Andropogoneae evolution and generic limits in Sorghum (Poaceae) using ndhF sequences.},
year = {1999},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/2419552},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {24},
number = {2},
pages = {267--281},
abstract = {DNA sequences of the chloroplast gene ndhF were used to estimate the phylogeny of the grass tribe Andropogoneae. Previous hypotheses of relationship in the tribe were based on cytological and morphological characters such as the presence/absence of awns, monoecy vs. andromonoecy, or inflorescence characteristics. Classifications were subsequently proposed based on those ideas of relationships, and these are examined in the context of the molecular data. The notion that the base number of the tribe is x=5 is tested using the phylogeny. Diploids with n=5 are not conclusively the earliest diverging members of the group, but are nested high in the tree and the earliest diverging lineages in the tribe have n=10. Subtribal designations are not informative due to the lack of resolution between clades in the strict consensus tree. There are well-supported clades in the tribe, including three Sorghum lineages and a core Andropogoneae clade, even though relationships among clades are poorly supported. The topological pattern suggests a rapid radiation for the group. A preliminary assessment of the generic limits of the genus Sorghum show it to be paraphyletic, including the genera Cleistachne, Miscanthus, and a species of Microstegium. Subtribe Sorghinae is represented here by Sorghum, Sorghastrum, Cleistachne, Bothriochloa, Capillipedium, Dichanthium, and Chrysopogon and does not form a monophyletic group.}
}
Citation for Study 402
Citation title:
"Andropogoneae evolution and generic limits in Sorghum (Poaceae) using ndhF sequences.".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S352
(Status: Published).
Citation
Spangler R., Zaitchik B., Russo E., & Kellogg E. 1999. Andropogoneae evolution and generic limits in Sorghum (Poaceae) using ndhF sequences. Systematic Botany, 24(2): 267-281.
Authors
-
Spangler R.
-
Zaitchik B.
-
Russo E.
-
Kellogg E.
Abstract
DNA sequences of the chloroplast gene ndhF were used to estimate the phylogeny of the grass tribe Andropogoneae. Previous hypotheses of relationship in the tribe were based on cytological and morphological characters such as the presence/absence of awns, monoecy vs. andromonoecy, or inflorescence characteristics. Classifications were subsequently proposed based on those ideas of relationships, and these are examined in the context of the molecular data. The notion that the base number of the tribe is x=5 is tested using the phylogeny. Diploids with n=5 are not conclusively the earliest diverging members of the group, but are nested high in the tree and the earliest diverging lineages in the tribe have n=10. Subtribal designations are not informative due to the lack of resolution between clades in the strict consensus tree. There are well-supported clades in the tribe, including three Sorghum lineages and a core Andropogoneae clade, even though relationships among clades are poorly supported. The topological pattern suggests a rapid radiation for the group. A preliminary assessment of the generic limits of the genus Sorghum show it to be paraphyletic, including the genera Cleistachne, Miscanthus, and a species of Microstegium. Subtribe Sorghinae is represented here by Sorghum, Sorghastrum, Cleistachne, Bothriochloa, Capillipedium, Dichanthium, and Chrysopogon and does not form a monophyletic group.
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S402
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref17600,
author = {Russ Spangler and Ben Zaitchik and Elizabeth Russo and Elizabeth A. Kellogg},
title = {Andropogoneae evolution and generic limits in Sorghum (Poaceae) using ndhF sequences.},
year = {1999},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/2419552},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Botany},
volume = {24},
number = {2},
pages = {267--281},
abstract = {DNA sequences of the chloroplast gene ndhF were used to estimate the phylogeny of the grass tribe Andropogoneae. Previous hypotheses of relationship in the tribe were based on cytological and morphological characters such as the presence/absence of awns, monoecy vs. andromonoecy, or inflorescence characteristics. Classifications were subsequently proposed based on those ideas of relationships, and these are examined in the context of the molecular data. The notion that the base number of the tribe is x=5 is tested using the phylogeny. Diploids with n=5 are not conclusively the earliest diverging members of the group, but are nested high in the tree and the earliest diverging lineages in the tribe have n=10. Subtribal designations are not informative due to the lack of resolution between clades in the strict consensus tree. There are well-supported clades in the tribe, including three Sorghum lineages and a core Andropogoneae clade, even though relationships among clades are poorly supported. The topological pattern suggests a rapid radiation for the group. A preliminary assessment of the generic limits of the genus Sorghum show it to be paraphyletic, including the genera Cleistachne, Miscanthus, and a species of Microstegium. Subtribe Sorghinae is represented here by Sorghum, Sorghastrum, Cleistachne, Bothriochloa, Capillipedium, Dichanthium, and Chrysopogon and does not form a monophyletic group.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 17600
AU - Spangler,Russ
AU - Zaitchik,Ben
AU - Russo,Elizabeth
AU - Kellogg,Elizabeth A.
T1 - Andropogoneae evolution and generic limits in Sorghum (Poaceae) using ndhF sequences.
PY - 1999
KW -
UR - http://www.jstor.org/stable/2419552
N2 - DNA sequences of the chloroplast gene ndhF were used to estimate the phylogeny of the grass tribe Andropogoneae. Previous hypotheses of relationship in the tribe were based on cytological and morphological characters such as the presence/absence of awns, monoecy vs. andromonoecy, or inflorescence characteristics. Classifications were subsequently proposed based on those ideas of relationships, and these are examined in the context of the molecular data. The notion that the base number of the tribe is x=5 is tested using the phylogeny. Diploids with n=5 are not conclusively the earliest diverging members of the group, but are nested high in the tree and the earliest diverging lineages in the tribe have n=10. Subtribal designations are not informative due to the lack of resolution between clades in the strict consensus tree. There are well-supported clades in the tribe, including three Sorghum lineages and a core Andropogoneae clade, even though relationships among clades are poorly supported. The topological pattern suggests a rapid radiation for the group. A preliminary assessment of the generic limits of the genus Sorghum show it to be paraphyletic, including the genera Cleistachne, Miscanthus, and a species of Microstegium. Subtribe Sorghinae is represented here by Sorghum, Sorghastrum, Cleistachne, Bothriochloa, Capillipedium, Dichanthium, and Chrysopogon and does not form a monophyletic group.
L3 -
JF - Systematic Botany
VL - 24
IS - 2
SP - 267
EP - 281
ER -