HISTORICAL BIOGEOGRAPHY OF THE AUSTRAL HORNWORT GENUS PHAEOMEGACEROS (DENDROCEROTACEAE, ANTHOCEROTOPHYTA)

G. Peñaloza-Bojacá, A. Sierra, H. Becher, K. Renzaglia, J. Villarreal A.
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The transoceanic disjunct distributions between Australasia and Austral America have been observed in many plant groups. The processes behind these disjunct distributions remain a source of debate due to differences in species vagility, biogeographical history, and complex geological and climatic changes. We address the phylogenetic relationships and biogeographical history of the austral hornwort genus Phaeomegaceros based on eight molecular markers from the three genomes (nuclear: phytochrome, mitochondrial: nad5, and chloroplast: rbcL, trnL intron, trnL-trnF spacer, rps4 gene, rps4-trnS spacer, and matK gene). With ten taxa based on morphological and molecular data, the three phylogenetic analyses supported the genus Phaeomegaceros as monophyletic. Phaeomegaceros is composed of two major clades corresponding to the New Zealand species, which presents a conspicuous trilete mark with one depression in the middle of the spore’s proximal face, and the Austral American species, which lack this middle depression. Dating and biogeographical analyses indicate that the Phaeomegaceros ancestral area was New Zealand and Antarctica in the Late Cretaceous (53.51 Ma, HPD 95% = 31.64–72.63). While Austral American species diverged during the Eocene. We speculate that climatic fluctuations in the Antarctic continent during the middle to late-Miocene led to the isolation of Phaeomegaceros taxa with both processes (dispersal events and vicariance) acting on the independent evolution of the disjunct clades. Furthermore, recent diversification of Phaeomegaceros taxa in Austral America and range expansion to northern Andes and oceanic islands, are explained by dispersal events and subsequent cladogenesis coinciding with the uplift of the Andes and the formation of volcanic oceanic islands (Juan Fernandez and Tristan da Cunha).
南方角苔属的历史生物地理学研究(树苔科,花苔门)
在许多植物类群中都观察到大洋洲和南美洲之间的跨洋断裂分布。由于物种多样性、生物地理历史以及复杂的地质和气候变化的差异,这些不间断分布背后的过程仍然是争论的来源。基于3个基因组的8个分子标记(核:光光色素,线粒体:nad5,叶绿体:rbcL, trnL内含子,trnL- trnf间隔子,rps4基因,rps4- trns间隔子和matK基因),研究了南方角苔属Phaeomegaceros的系统发育关系和生物地理历史。基于形态学和分子数据的10个分类群,三个系统发育分析支持Phaeomegaceros属的单系性。Phaeomegaceros由两个主要的分支组成,与新西兰种相对应,新西兰种在孢子近端面的中间有一个明显的三叉标志,而南美种则没有这种中间的凹陷。年代测定和生物地理分析表明,Phaeomegaceros的祖先区在晚白垩世的新西兰和南极洲(53.51 Ma, HPD 95% = 31.64-72.63)。而南美洲物种则在始新世开始分化。我们推测,中新世中后期南极大陆的气候波动导致Phaeomegaceros分类群的分离,两个过程(扩散事件和变异)都作用于分离分支的独立进化。此外,Phaeomegaceros类群最近在南美洲的多样化和范围扩展到安第斯山脉北部和海洋岛屿,可以用与安第斯山脉隆起和火山海洋岛屿形成相一致的分散事件和随后的枝生来解释(Juan Fernandez和Tristan da Cunha)。
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