Phylogeny, biogeography, and rates of diversification of New World Astragalus (Leguminosae) with an emphasis on South American radiations
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2008-08Metadata
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Scherson, Rosa A.
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Phylogeny, biogeography, and rates of diversification of New World Astragalus (Leguminosae) with an emphasis on South American radiations
Abstract
This study uses phylogenetic relationships of New World representatives of the species-rich genus Astragalus (Leguminosae;
Papilionoideae) to follow up on recent evidence pointing to rapid and recent plant diversifi cation patterns in the Andes. Bayesian and
maximum likelihood phylogenetic analyses were done using nuclear rDNA ITS and chloroplast spacers trnD-trnT and trnfM-trnS1 ,
either separately or in combination. The effect of using partitioned vs. nonpartitioned analyses in a Bayesian approach was evaluated.
Highest resolution was obtained when the data were combined in partitioned or nonpartitioned Bayesian analyses. All phylogenies
support two clades of South American species nested within the North American species, implying two separate invasions
from North to South America. These two clades correspond to the original morphological classifi cation of Johnston (1947 Journal
of the Arnold Arboretum 28: 336 – 409). The mean ages of the South American clades were very recent but still signifi cantly different
(1.89 and 0.98 Ma). Upper and lower bounds on rates of diversifi cation varied between 2.01 and 0.65 species/Ma for the older clade
and 2.06 and 1.24 species/Ma for the younger clade. Even the lower bounds are still very high, reasserting Neo-Astragalus in the
growing list of recent rapid radiations of plants, especially in areas with a high physiographic diversity, such as the Andes .
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AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, Volume: 95, Issue: 8, Pages: 1030-103, 2008
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