@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref30864,
author = {Inelia Escobar and Eduardo Ruiz and Paula J. Rudall and Michael F. Fay and Oscar Toro and Heidy M. Villalobos-Barrantes and Carlos M. Baeza},
title = {Phylogenetic relationships based on nuclear and plastid DNA sequences reveal recent diversification and discordant patterns of morphological evolution of the Chilean genera of Gilliesieae (Amaryllidaceae: Allioideae)},
year = {2020},
keywords = {Ancrumia, Chilean Hotspot, Gethyum, Gilliesia, phylogeny, paraphyly, Solaria, Speea},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Gilliesieae are a South American tribe of Amaryllidaceae characterized by high floral diversity. Given different taxonomic interpretations and proposals for generic and specific relationships, a representative phylogenetic analysis is required to clarify the systematics of this group. The present study provides a framework for understanding phylogenetic relationships and contributing to the development of an appropriate taxonomic treatment of Gilliesieae. Molecular analyses, based on nuclear (ITS) and plastid DNA sequences (trnL-F spacer and rbcL gene), resolve with strong support the monophyly of the tribe and the differentiation of two major clades. Clade I comprises the genera
Gilliesia, Gethyum, and Solaria and Clade II include Miersia and Speea. These well-supported clades are mostly congruent with vegetative and karyotype characters rather than, e.g. floral symmetry. At the generic level, all molecular analyses reveal the paraphyly of Gilliesia and Miersia. Gethyum was found to be paraphyletic, resulting in the confirmation of Ancrumia as a distinct genus. Several instances of incongruent phylogenetic signals were found among data sets. The calibrated tree suggests a recent diversification of the tribe (Pliocene?Pleistocene), a contemporary process of speciation in which instances of hybridization and incomplete lineage sorting could explain
patterns of paraphyly and incongruence of floral morphology.}
}
Citation for Study 26352

Citation title:
"Phylogenetic relationships based on nuclear and plastid DNA sequences reveal recent diversification and discordant patterns of morphological evolution of the Chilean genera of Gilliesieae (Amaryllidaceae: Allioideae)".

Study name:
"Phylogenetic relationships based on nuclear and plastid DNA sequences reveal recent diversification and discordant patterns of morphological evolution of the Chilean genera of Gilliesieae (Amaryllidaceae: Allioideae)".

This study is part of submission 26352
(Status: Published).
Citation
Escobar I., Ruiz E., Rudall P.J., Fay M.F., Toro O., Villalobos-barrantes H.M., & Baeza C. 2020. Phylogenetic relationships based on nuclear and plastid DNA sequences reveal recent diversification and discordant patterns of morphological evolution of the Chilean genera of Gilliesieae (Amaryllidaceae: Allioideae). Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, .
Authors
-
Escobar I.
-
Ruiz E.
-
Rudall P.J.
-
Fay M.F.
-
Toro O.
(submitter)
-
Villalobos-barrantes H.M.
-
Baeza C.
Abstract
Gilliesieae are a South American tribe of Amaryllidaceae characterized by high floral diversity. Given different taxonomic interpretations and proposals for generic and specific relationships, a representative phylogenetic analysis is required to clarify the systematics of this group. The present study provides a framework for understanding phylogenetic relationships and contributing to the development of an appropriate taxonomic treatment of Gilliesieae. Molecular analyses, based on nuclear (ITS) and plastid DNA sequences (trnL-F spacer and rbcL gene), resolve with strong support the monophyly of the tribe and the differentiation of two major clades. Clade I comprises the genera
Gilliesia, Gethyum, and Solaria and Clade II include Miersia and Speea. These well-supported clades are mostly congruent with vegetative and karyotype characters rather than, e.g. floral symmetry. At the generic level, all molecular analyses reveal the paraphyly of Gilliesia and Miersia. Gethyum was found to be paraphyletic, resulting in the confirmation of Ancrumia as a distinct genus. Several instances of incongruent phylogenetic signals were found among data sets. The calibrated tree suggests a recent diversification of the tribe (Pliocene?Pleistocene), a contemporary process of speciation in which instances of hybridization and incomplete lineage sorting could explain
patterns of paraphyly and incongruence of floral morphology.
Keywords
Ancrumia, Chilean Hotspot, Gethyum, Gilliesia, phylogeny, paraphyly, Solaria, Speea
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S26352
- Other versions:
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NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref30864,
author = {Inelia Escobar and Eduardo Ruiz and Paula J. Rudall and Michael F. Fay and Oscar Toro and Heidy M. Villalobos-Barrantes and Carlos M. Baeza},
title = {Phylogenetic relationships based on nuclear and plastid DNA sequences reveal recent diversification and discordant patterns of morphological evolution of the Chilean genera of Gilliesieae (Amaryllidaceae: Allioideae)},
year = {2020},
keywords = {Ancrumia, Chilean Hotspot, Gethyum, Gilliesia, phylogeny, paraphyly, Solaria, Speea},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Gilliesieae are a South American tribe of Amaryllidaceae characterized by high floral diversity. Given different taxonomic interpretations and proposals for generic and specific relationships, a representative phylogenetic analysis is required to clarify the systematics of this group. The present study provides a framework for understanding phylogenetic relationships and contributing to the development of an appropriate taxonomic treatment of Gilliesieae. Molecular analyses, based on nuclear (ITS) and plastid DNA sequences (trnL-F spacer and rbcL gene), resolve with strong support the monophyly of the tribe and the differentiation of two major clades. Clade I comprises the genera
Gilliesia, Gethyum, and Solaria and Clade II include Miersia and Speea. These well-supported clades are mostly congruent with vegetative and karyotype characters rather than, e.g. floral symmetry. At the generic level, all molecular analyses reveal the paraphyly of Gilliesia and Miersia. Gethyum was found to be paraphyletic, resulting in the confirmation of Ancrumia as a distinct genus. Several instances of incongruent phylogenetic signals were found among data sets. The calibrated tree suggests a recent diversification of the tribe (Pliocene?Pleistocene), a contemporary process of speciation in which instances of hybridization and incomplete lineage sorting could explain
patterns of paraphyly and incongruence of floral morphology.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 30864
AU - Escobar,Inelia
AU - Ruiz,Eduardo
AU - Rudall,Paula J.
AU - Fay,Michael F.
AU - Toro,Oscar
AU - Villalobos-Barrantes,Heidy M.
AU - Baeza,Carlos M.
T1 - Phylogenetic relationships based on nuclear and plastid DNA sequences reveal recent diversification and discordant patterns of morphological evolution of the Chilean genera of Gilliesieae (Amaryllidaceae: Allioideae)
PY - 2020
KW - Ancrumia
KW - Chilean Hotspot
KW - Gethyum
KW - Gilliesia
KW - phylogeny
KW - paraphyly
KW - Solaria
KW - Speea
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Gilliesieae are a South American tribe of Amaryllidaceae characterized by high floral diversity. Given different taxonomic interpretations and proposals for generic and specific relationships, a representative phylogenetic analysis is required to clarify the systematics of this group. The present study provides a framework for understanding phylogenetic relationships and contributing to the development of an appropriate taxonomic treatment of Gilliesieae. Molecular analyses, based on nuclear (ITS) and plastid DNA sequences (trnL-F spacer and rbcL gene), resolve with strong support the monophyly of the tribe and the differentiation of two major clades. Clade I comprises the genera
Gilliesia, Gethyum, and Solaria and Clade II include Miersia and Speea. These well-supported clades are mostly congruent with vegetative and karyotype characters rather than, e.g. floral symmetry. At the generic level, all molecular analyses reveal the paraphyly of Gilliesia and Miersia. Gethyum was found to be paraphyletic, resulting in the confirmation of Ancrumia as a distinct genus. Several instances of incongruent phylogenetic signals were found among data sets. The calibrated tree suggests a recent diversification of the tribe (Pliocene?Pleistocene), a contemporary process of speciation in which instances of hybridization and incomplete lineage sorting could explain
patterns of paraphyly and incongruence of floral morphology.
L3 -
JF - Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society
VL -
IS -
ER -