TY - JOUR
T1 - Early evolution of Coriariaceae (Cucurbitales) in light of a new early Campanian (ca. 82 Mya) pollen record from Antarctica
AU - Renner, Susanne S.
AU - Barreda, Viviana D.
AU - Tellería, María Cristina
AU - Palazzesi, Luis
AU - Schuster, Tanja M.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank James Doyle (University of California, Davis) for insights regarding Coriaria fossils, Martina Silber (LMU) for DNA sequencing and GenBank submissions, Andrea Goss for help with laboratory work during a student research project in our lab, and Aretuza Sousa (LMU) for the ChromEvol analysis. For plant material or photos we thank Ilse Breitwieser, Kate Boardman, and Ines Schönberger (all CHR); Jennifer Tate (MPN); Andreas Gröger (Botanic Garden Munich-Nymphenburg); Pieter Pelser (Canterbury University); Mark Olson (MEXU); Katharina Pawlowski (Stockholm University); Axel Dalberg Poulsen (Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh); and Akiko Shimizu (TI).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Authors. TAXON published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Association for Plant Taxonomy.
PY - 2020/2/1
Y1 - 2020/2/1
N2 - Coriariaceae comprise only Coriaria, a genus of shrubs with nine species in Australasia (but excluding Australia), five in the Himalayas, Taiwan, the Philippines, and Japan, one in the Mediterranean, and one ranging from Patagonia to Mexico. The sister family, Corynocarpaceae, comprises five species of evergreen trees from New Guinea to New Zealand and Australia. This distribution has long fascinated biogeographers as potential support for Wegener's theory of continental drift, with alternative scenarios invoking either Antarctic or Beringian range expansions. Here, we present the discovery of pollen grains from Early Campanian (ca. 82 Mya) deposits in Antarctica, which we describe as Coriaripites goodii sp. nov., and newly generated nuclear and plastid molecular data for most of the family's species and its outgroup. This greatly expands the family's fossil record and is the so far oldest fossil of the order Cucurbitales. We used the phylogeny, new fossil, and an Oligocene flowering branch assigned to a small subclade of Coriaria to generate a chronogram and to study changes in chromosome number, deciduousness, and andromonoecy. Coriaria comprises a Northern (NH) and a Southern Hemisphere (SH) clade that diverged from each other in the Paleocene (ca. 57 Mya), with the SH clade reaching the New World once, through Antarctica, as supported by the fossil pollen. While the SH clade retained perfect flowers and evergreen leaves, the NH clade evolved andromonoecy and deciduousness. Polyploidy occurs in both clades and points to hybridization, matching weak species boundaries throughout the genus.
AB - Coriariaceae comprise only Coriaria, a genus of shrubs with nine species in Australasia (but excluding Australia), five in the Himalayas, Taiwan, the Philippines, and Japan, one in the Mediterranean, and one ranging from Patagonia to Mexico. The sister family, Corynocarpaceae, comprises five species of evergreen trees from New Guinea to New Zealand and Australia. This distribution has long fascinated biogeographers as potential support for Wegener's theory of continental drift, with alternative scenarios invoking either Antarctic or Beringian range expansions. Here, we present the discovery of pollen grains from Early Campanian (ca. 82 Mya) deposits in Antarctica, which we describe as Coriaripites goodii sp. nov., and newly generated nuclear and plastid molecular data for most of the family's species and its outgroup. This greatly expands the family's fossil record and is the so far oldest fossil of the order Cucurbitales. We used the phylogeny, new fossil, and an Oligocene flowering branch assigned to a small subclade of Coriaria to generate a chronogram and to study changes in chromosome number, deciduousness, and andromonoecy. Coriaria comprises a Northern (NH) and a Southern Hemisphere (SH) clade that diverged from each other in the Paleocene (ca. 57 Mya), with the SH clade reaching the New World once, through Antarctica, as supported by the fossil pollen. While the SH clade retained perfect flowers and evergreen leaves, the NH clade evolved andromonoecy and deciduousness. Polyploidy occurs in both clades and points to hybridization, matching weak species boundaries throughout the genus.
KW - Antarctica
KW - biogeography
KW - chromosome numbers
KW - Cretaceous
KW - deciduousness
KW - Oligocene
KW - pollen
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85082818017&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/tax.12203
DO - 10.1002/tax.12203
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85082818017
SN - 0040-0262
VL - 69
SP - 87
EP - 99
JO - Taxon
JF - Taxon
IS - 1
ER -