TY - JOUR
T1 - APPARENT SIMILARITY, UNDERLYING HOMOPLASY
T2 - MORPHOLOGY AND MOLECULAR PHYLOGENY OF THE NORTH AMERICAN CLADE OF M ANIHOT1
AU - Cervantes-Alcayde, María Angélica
AU - Olson, Mark E.
AU - Olsen, Kenneth M.
AU - Eguiarte, Luis E.
N1 - Funding Information:
Funded by CONACyT grants 46475 and 132404, and PAPIIT grant IN228207. The authors thank the Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE) for the 50,000 CPU hours granted. The authors thank V. W. Steinmann, Y. Ramírez Amezcua, and V. Rojas Piña for field assistance. M.-A.C.-A. thanks the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología of Mexico for a graduate scholarship and the Posgrado en Ciencias Biológicas of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.The authors thank L. O. Alvarado-Cá rdenas for assistance with the figures, R. Cerritos Flores and J. Rosell García for assistance in cloning and annotating sequences, J. Calónico Soto for some of the pictures, D.-I. Hern ández-Mena for help in reconstructing growth form evolution, L. M árquez Valdelamar and L. Small for invaluable laboratory assistance, and Mark P. Simmons and two anonymous reviewers for significant improvements to the manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Botanical Society of America.
PY - 2015/4
Y1 - 2015/4
N2 - • Premise of the study: Morphologically diverse clades are useful for detecting adaptive morphological evolution. Each of their variants may have evolved once or several times, suggesting that their repeated appearance may be due to environmental pres-sures. The North American Manihot species are an excellent system to detect possible adaptations and to assess the effect of mono-or polyphyly on classification. With 20 species, this group includes growth forms from tuberous herbs to trees. The monophyly of this group and its relationship with the economically important M. esculenta were tested for the first time with complete sampling of North American species. • Methods: We carried out maximum likelihood and Bayesian phylogenetic analyses on a matrix of 3662 bp from chloroplast (psbA-trnH, trnL-trnF) and nuclear loci (PEPC and two paralogous copies of G3pdh). We included all North American Mani-hot species, Manihotoides pauciflora, and published sequences from 34 South American species. • Key results: Our results support monophyly of the North American Manihot group. Its taxonomic sections are paraphyletic, and three to four growth forms evolved repeatedly. Manihotoides pauciflora is nested within North American Manihot species. Some PEPC and G3pdh clones grouped with clones of other species and not with clones from their own species. • Conclusions: North and South American Manihot species are sister clades. Paraphyly of North American sections suggests that taxonomic revision is warranted. The position of Manihotoides pauciflora confirms that Manihotoides should remain subsumed within Manihot. Most growth forms likely evolved repeatedly in this group. The behavior of PEPC and G3pdhNA clones is probably due to incomplete lineage sorting.
AB - • Premise of the study: Morphologically diverse clades are useful for detecting adaptive morphological evolution. Each of their variants may have evolved once or several times, suggesting that their repeated appearance may be due to environmental pres-sures. The North American Manihot species are an excellent system to detect possible adaptations and to assess the effect of mono-or polyphyly on classification. With 20 species, this group includes growth forms from tuberous herbs to trees. The monophyly of this group and its relationship with the economically important M. esculenta were tested for the first time with complete sampling of North American species. • Methods: We carried out maximum likelihood and Bayesian phylogenetic analyses on a matrix of 3662 bp from chloroplast (psbA-trnH, trnL-trnF) and nuclear loci (PEPC and two paralogous copies of G3pdh). We included all North American Mani-hot species, Manihotoides pauciflora, and published sequences from 34 South American species. • Key results: Our results support monophyly of the North American Manihot group. Its taxonomic sections are paraphyletic, and three to four growth forms evolved repeatedly. Manihotoides pauciflora is nested within North American Manihot species. Some PEPC and G3pdh clones grouped with clones of other species and not with clones from their own species. • Conclusions: North and South American Manihot species are sister clades. Paraphyly of North American sections suggests that taxonomic revision is warranted. The position of Manihotoides pauciflora confirms that Manihotoides should remain subsumed within Manihot. Most growth forms likely evolved repeatedly in this group. The behavior of PEPC and G3pdhNA clones is probably due to incomplete lineage sorting.
KW - Bayesian analyses
KW - Euphorbiaceae
KW - growth form evolution
KW - incomplete lineage sorting
KW - Manihotoides pauciflora
KW - maximum likelihood
KW - morphological homoplasy
KW - North American Manihot clade
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84974803287&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3732/AJB.1500063
DO - 10.3732/AJB.1500063
M3 - Article
C2 - 25878086
AN - SCOPUS:84974803287
SN - 0002-9122
VL - 102
SP - 520
EP - 532
JO - American Journal of Botany
JF - American Journal of Botany
IS - 4
ER -